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The phrase "army to start" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to refer to the initiation of an army-related action or event, but without additional context, it is ambiguous.
Example: "The general announced that the army to start would be mobilized at dawn."
Alternatives: "military to commence" or "troops to begin".
Exact(10)
Such a soldier, General Chiarelli said, "is coming in the Army to start all over again, and we see this high rate of suicide".
"De Lesseps", it turned out, was the codeword for the Egyptian army to start the seizure, and nationalisation, of the canal.
It was heightened at midweek, when President Andres Pastrana ordered the army to start withdrawing from a large area in the south, to facilitate talks with the larger Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
In Haiti, protesters chanting "We're hungry" forced the prime minister to resign; 24 people were killed in riots in Cameroon; Egypt's president ordered the army to start baking bread; the Philippines made hoarding rice punishable by life imprisonment.
This means the next two tranches of redundancy will be huge – and are likely to coincide with the draw-down from Afghanistan, leaving the army to start afresh in 2015.
Sinn Fein's president, Gerry Adams, has warned that though his party is the political representative of the I.R.A., it cannot compel the underground army to start turning over its weapons now.
Similar(50)
Earlier this month, Mr Pastrana ended a ten-month hiatus in Colombia's peace process by securing the agreement of the FARC, the largest of the country's left-wing guerrilla armies, to start serious talks.
The people complain there are insufficient boats, although the army plans to start operating large rafts which can transport more goods and even small jeeps.
Photograph: Danny Martindale/WireImage 1.25pm GMT A schoolgirl, who was displaced with her family from Pakistan's tribal areas due to fighting between the Taliban and the army, waits to start her classes in Islamabad.
"This army is going to start breaking," said Jeffrey White, a former Defense Intelligence Agency analyst now studying Syria for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Unfortunately, he left the army in 2002 to start what has been described by many as a "musical career" and by others as "vapid aural terrorism".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com