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She said it's common for some words to be used so often that they actually become devoid of meaning.
A Japanese public that has become devoid of emotions reacted excessively to this brave act, as if it were seeking salvation.
As Tony Tanner puts it in his fascinating book Adultery in the Novel, "the adulterer or adulteress effectively 'renarrativizes' a life that has become devoid of story".
Within a growth ring, those cells responsible for the conduction of water rapidly become devoid of cell contents because they must be empty and dead at functional maturity.
Little is established, either, about why women may be somewhat more likely to become devoid of desire as they get deeper into middle age — and even this tendency itself is far from proven and is contradicted by some data.
As established skiing regions become devoid of snow, their own virtually guaranteed white stuff (light at the moment, admittedly, but with more expected after Christmas) will be sucking in the tourists.
Similar(47)
As an alumni communications officer I'm expected to embrace it, but this kind of professional jargon becomes devoid of meaning over time.
(ii) A kinematic transition wherein the material transforms from a 'structured liquid' to a 'true liquid' state exhibited by the disappearance of the initial glassy component as the material becomes devoid of the inherent structure due to segmental correlations.
And so words became devoid of meaning".
The center of circulation quickly became devoid of convection.
The following morning, the center of Gilma became devoid of convection, exposing the low-level circulation.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com