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Idiom
In the face of.
If people act in the face of something, they do it despite it or when threatened by it.
Exact(2)
Mr. Rogers says the volunteers and the students avidly testing water quality and hauling trash provide the ultimate riposte to the old offensive cliches about Appalachian folk -- notions that, visitors easily see, do not apply in the face of the high-tech "Silicon Holler" budding near Hazard.
Nowadays, you don't see painted train cars all that often presumably because New York enforces heavy fines and potential jail time but painting trains remains pretty much the pinnacle achievement for most graffiti writers elsewhere, considering the precision, skill, and speed you have to apply in the face of heightened danger.
Similar(57)
Activation initiates the action, intensity is the amount of effort given to that action, and perseverance is how long that intensity can be applied in the face of obstacles.
When MSPG was applied in the face of glutamate export elicited by a modest amount of LPS (2 ng/ml), there was a trend towards amplification of glutamate levels in the conditioned medium corresponding to MSPG concentration, culminating in a significant elevation at 300 μM MSPG.
Or should something like the "old rules" still apply, even in the face of the economic and technological forces that are eroding the local press at an alarming rate.
Enhanced prediction techniques enable farmers to determine the best sites to plant crops and the most effective techniques for applying fertilizers in the face of abnormal weather conditions.
The comprehensive spending review that accompanied the PBR marked the definitive end of Labour's splurge on public spending of the past seven years, with the brakes being applied firmly in the face of stubbornly high budget deficits that have lasted since 2002/03.
OFFA's goal is to encourage people from lower income backgrounds to apply to university in the face of higher tuition fees.
The authors of the current study -- from the University of Ontario and the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor -- cite earlier research as well as this study to suggest that methamphetamine paves the way for risk-taking behavior by revving up brain regions involved in reward-seeking and suppressing activity in brain regions that would normally apply the brakes in the face of risky behavior.
If you meet age and duration requirements, Ms. Bonauto said, you should apply for benefits, even in the face of other uncertainties.
It is that issue -- how should a lower court judge apply a Supreme Court precedent in the face of changed circumstances?
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com