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Quite a bit, seems to be the answer.
To the laymen the trickiest bit seems to be the height requirement – 3,000 metres for a gold and 5,000 for a diamond.
The mobile phone skit probably needs a bit more context to make it work, and the giblets bit seems like it's an outtake from Kingpin, but never mind.
In the 1st millennium bce carts appeared, and the horses were harnessed to them; other riding equipment, including the saddle and the bit, seems to have appeared in later centuries.
Insisting on the "English" bit seems unnecessarily provocative to me, and for the sake of keeping our entente with France cordiale, I think it's better just to talk about "the Channel".
Details like a drug ship named the Annabel Lee are lingered over slightly too long, and while it's amusing to listen to gangsters debate the analytic philosopher Bertrand Russell, this kind of bit seems intended either to flatter the writer or his audience.
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That last bit seemed to be Mrs. Dees taking a shot at the bowling-alley gal.
Another, a version of the classic water-tossing bit, seemed especially cruel in the cold weather.
Exhaustive search of patterns, where is the number of candidate coefficients and is the number of embedded bits, seems inevitable.
Other bits seem superficially straightforward.
Some bits seemed almost trivial, such as deregulation of school buses, hotel shuttles and limousine services.
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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