Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(2)
Exact(1)
But for now U.S. priorities seem best measured by the $172 million U.S. embassy that has been completed in Khartoum -- and this doesn't include the pricey bits of intelligence and surveillance equipment that likely more than double this cost.
Similar(59)
I don't think anybody who has a little bit of intelligence and sensitivity will disagree with the idea of socialism.
Crowd-sourcing quickly turned into witchhunting, he noted, and bits of intelligence surfaced amid "new forms of banality".
By breaking down the continuities of communication into discrete series and signals, telegraphy created the conditions necessary to coordinate action at a distance through the manipulation of serial data: the signs, signals, and other discrete bits of intelligence that were actively reconstructed by newspapers to produce the continuous spectacle of war news and sensational journalism.
That buffer has gotten a bump in size in the iPhone 8, and Apple is now applying deep learning to optimize the process for the right time to shoot, the subject matter and other bits of intelligence.
Authored in response to mentions of Germany in a wave of post-Brussels Islamic State propaganda, the report compiles bits of intelligence gleaned from three years of jihadi chatter and propaganda, official documents, and regional news.
His superior was deeply greateful for several illuminating bits of intelligence he was subsequently able to relay.
The Fox News contributor Karl Rove, a former adviser to President George W. Bush, maintained that credit should go to Mr. Obama's predecessor, who put a premium on interrogation methods that may have provided bits of intelligence critical to Sunday's operation.
Among the last bits of intelligence he & his sister gleaned about the Midnight Frolic during their stay there was that the night club's owner - known to them simply as Mr. Brown- was really Al Capone.
These people are like small-time hoodlums, hoping to score by trading bits of intelligence that come their way, or, in this instance, by volunteering to organize a hit on someone they know the boss would like to see dead.
The chronic shortage of language experts is N.S.A.'s Achilles' heel -- so much so that one of the most sensitive bits of intelligence revealed about Sept. 11 was that the N.S.A. had intercepted a Qaeda message on Sept. 10 saying, "Tomorrow is zero hour".
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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