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He can only listen to the local politicians and in turn try to bend the ears of federal ones, to wheedle some extra money here, another road there.
When he quit his "miserable" bank job and moved to Long Island City, he would bend the ears of Asian storeowners, seeking to learn how they had done it.
Its direct access to countries' finance ministries (the WHO rarely deals with anybody higher up the cabinet table than the health minister), means that it can bend the ears of the people who matter most, and be reasonably sure that its agreements, once made, will not fail through lack of political support.
They have been able to bend the ears of the chief executives, asking and receiving information that less important shareholders might not be able to hear.Technically, however, such selective briefing can fall foul of the Financial Services Authority FSAA), with its strict insistence on a blunt principle of equality of information.
So if I had just the smallest opportunity to bend the ears of our political leaders, my plea on this World Book Day is that we really make sure that not only do children master literacy but also that we fire their imaginations so they can love and treasure the great power of stories.
The Supreme Court's recent decision in Citizens United -- which, by a 5-4 ruling, will allow corporations to drown out the voices of Americans not equipped to spend millions of dollars to bend the ears of their public servants -- is not going over well with the public.
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Do not pay somebody fifty thousand dollars to bend the ear of an admissions officer; invest in a race horse instead.
Goldman Sachs employs perhaps the country's most well-connected stable of Washington lobbyists, and it spent $2.8 million last year to bend the ear of federal officials and lawmakers.
Paul Scott is willing to chip in more than half of his annual salary — $32,400 — to bend the ear of President Obama at a Democratic fund-raiser.
"Oh my goodness, yes!" exclaimed Innocent Noundja, a commuter from Lynn, Mass., when asked if he would like to bend the ear, or some other appendage, of a transit authority official or two.
For those of us who cannot grace the stately rooms of Parliament, we now know it is a place where, over cups of tea or pints of beer, corporate lobbyists bend the ear of our elected and non-elected representatives in favour of their clients.
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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