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Free sign up'blunders' is a correct and usable English word.
You can use it to refer to a foolish or careless mistake, particularly one that causes embarrassment or regrets. Example: He made a series of blunders that cost him the promotion.
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A more recent account of government failures agrees, calling it "the blunder to end all blunders".
Facebook Twitter Google plus Share Share this post Facebook Twitter Google plus close 12.20pm ET17 20 "One of worst political blunders in modern U.S. history is likely to be remembered as good news," Anatole Kaletsky writes for Reuters.
A string of police blunders led two members of the force's elite armed unit, CO19, to open fire with their guns just 1cm to 8cm away from De Menezes' head as another officer pinned him into a seat on an underground train at Stockwell station.
Things have gone nowhere as well as Osborne expected when he arrived in spring 2010 and this is partly, though not entirely, due to his own blunders.
He has every chance to repair the blunders of his predecessor while upholding the principles of compassionate, centrist Conservatism.
But as historic elections this month ushered in a new Nigerian government, many hope for a break from a past administration often shrouded in secrecy and public blunders in its dealings with the sect.
"Fuck me, I don't look good at all here," the SC Freiburg keeper Oliver Baumann admitted to reporters after his three awful blunders in the defeat to Hamburg.
The biggest of Miliband's many blunders: he put Douglas Alexander in charge of election strategy Ed Miliband has left little behind, except his attempts to mobilise communities.
Over more than 6,000 highly detailed words, Wintour relayed the confessions of Labour's inner circle on the missteps and blunders that took them to disaster on 7 May.
Many blame the lack of progress on the ongoing peace process between the Turkish government and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK), whose guerrillas have been fighting Ankara for the past 30 years, as well as AK party blunders in Syria.
The word, originally coined by the writers of the political satire The Thick of It, and adopted by the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, to describe the caravan and pasty taxes and other political blunders and U-turns of the government's 2012 budget, has made it into the Oxford Dictionaries online.
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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