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In 1860 Vanity Fair characterised them as "vain, mean, selfish, greedy, sensual and sly, talkative and cowardly".
They wanted to play – in a way which deconstructed the way that Gatland had characterised them as negativists, seeking to kill the flow of the sport.
He said this had helped spur the revolutions and characterised them as "the most important events in the Muslim world in centuries".
George Hull in the Spectator described the youth as "wimpy pseudo-hedonists", Fraser Nelson characterised them as the "Ab-Fab generation" unable to match the debauchery of their parents, and a Spiked article on the subject simply characterised the trend as depressing.
He characterised them as Aδ-myelinated fibres.
Nevertheless, 50.9% (55/108) and 44.0% (44/100) of women who confirmed provider reports of having experienced shivering and fever during their exit interviews characterised them as being 'intolerable'intolerable
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The most fanatical hardliners came from counter-intelligence, she suggested, characterising them as zombies.
A political rhetoric that characterises them as wilful criminals rather than helpless victims is as unworthy as it is untrue".
CEOs see themselves as good guys (don't we all), but to characterise them as "stuck on a plateau of good intentions" is quite frankly laughable.
As for the designs, I'd characterise them as unassuming: there are plain circular ones; plain square ones; and ones with a faintly iridescent design.
He characterises them as families who manage to get by, but who have low resilience to economic shocks such as rising inflation and interest rates.
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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