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Finally, to be inspired to write an entire book about a man's life, you must have considerable interest in the man's life, and, to put it candidly, though I particularly admired the story "What the Cystoscope Said" when it appeared in 1954, and I told the author as much, over the years I otherwise had no particular interest in Anatole Broyard.
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Vintage Fraser it is not, the author's family candidly admit, though "Captain in Calico", about real-life pirate John "Calico Jack Rackhamm, is still a "cracking little story".
The trial court, though candidly critical of the current state of the law, concluded that existing legal doctrines did not support AMA's proposed cross-complaint, and accordingly denied AMA's motion for leave to file the cross-complaint.
All this analysis of people's tweeting habits, and the views they express, goes on even though said hacks candidly admit how unsound it is when you can't possibly know who is included in the sample.
He consulted with the maker about color schemes, even though he candidly admitted that he'd never tested the product personally.
Nor did it mean, he said, a lapse into intolerance or violence, though he candidly called any such fear "historically well grounded".
He also candidly explained that even though the startup has seen some success with its longer-running direct-to-consumer offering — having sold speciality coffee to over 300,000 U.K. households — it overestimated the size of the market for consumers who want speciality coffee delivered on a subscription basis.
Most important, though, Brule candidly answered that question "Who is me?" On stage and on television, him was the son of Dorris Pringle-Brule-Salahari. Him was the spurned lover of Jan Skylar.
Hilary notes that congressional committees and an interagency group do carefully review who is targeted and that a restrained Obama has not used drones against terrorist camps and regions, though she candidly admits that she wouldn't be so sanguine if Bush-Cheney had made the same decision.
"The Clark Sickle-Leaf Carpet," ascribed to 17th-century Iran ("Persia" in Sotheby's dated parlance), was hyped to death even though the catalog candidly stated that the sides were gone.
Mailer's long virtuoso article, "Superman Comes to the Supermarket," came as close as any book or essay ever has to capturing Kennedy's essence, though that essence, Mailer candidly acknowledged, was enigmatic.
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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