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Central banks held dollars because of its acceptability, the breadth of US markets and the general underpinning of its position as indubitably the world's largest economy.
For both, it was the realization that something about the type on those labels (Gill Sans, they later learned) marked the food, with no other cues needed, as indubitably English.
420 C.E./1998) and is most famously deployed by Descartes in his Discourse on Method (1637/1985) and Meditations (1641/1984), where he takes the self-fulfilling thought that he is thinking as indubitably true, immune to even the most radical skepticism, and a secure ground on which to build further knowledge.
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Spinoza's definition of "blessedness" was "the intellectual love of God," in which the mind sees the necessity of everything in the world as simply and indubitably as Plato's slave perceived the necessity of the Pythagorean theorem.
Intelligent as he indubitably was, Kenner was no highbrow purist.
Frozen peas, indubitably, are as good as fresh (does anyone want to dubitate that?) But some things, like soft fruit, will never survive freezing, or, more important, thawing.
Torture is depicted as indirectly but indubitably useful in the search for bin Laden (an assertion that has been denied by officials, as reported in the magazine by Dexter Filkins); a crucial piece of information in Maya's investigation is elicited from a prisoner who had been tortured and, now being fed a peaceful lunch, is threatened with more torture in the case of his non-coöperation.
As Louis, Thomson is indubitably likeable.
Indeed, these women have access to power as violence is indubitably a form of power and this access to power is critical to ISIS.
Although it's difficult to make excuses for the unremittingly lame Miss Marple, few have been capable of resisting her Walloon counterpart, the mustachioed Hercule Poirot, who indubitably ranks as one of literature's great characters (ahead of Hamlet, behind Falstaff).
Still, indubitably clannish as they were, the price of admission to what Edel calls the "House of Lions" had nothing to do with Edwardian standards of lineage or class (although many of the members leaned on independent income) and everything to do with a democratic principle of competitively sharpened wits.
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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