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And the food of choice, more often than not, was the roast beef sandwich, which once, according to Mr. Karce, put an Arby's across the street out of business.
For all the bright talk about multicultural mosaics, the age of globalization has also been an age of unprecedented religious and racial sorting — sometimes by choice, more often at gunpoint.
William Boyd On the whole I prefer to give a book token and let people make their own selection, but my book-gift of choice more often than not tends to be Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire (Penguin Modern Classics).
-If you could choose not to listen to gossip when you come upon it, would you make this choice more often than not, and why or why not? -Have you ever found gossip to be helpful to you?
While managed retreat is not always the right choice for communities threatened by climate change, both Mach and Hino said that it may be the right choice more often than we're willing to admit, and they hope that their analysis will lead to its more forthright consideration.
However, certain patient groups (such as more highly educated and younger patients [ 59, 79, 80, 82, 83], patients with higher incomes [ 59, 82, 83] and patients without an existing (satisfactory) relationship with a provider [ 42, 47]) make an active choice more often.
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Another challenge in the decision-making process of admission of elderly patients aged 80 years and older is that physicians' choices more often are intuitive than "rational".
The difference between you and the competitor who is beating you is the discipline to make these choices more often and effectively.
It would therefore seem that health professionals have to make intervention choices more often according to the limitations of the institutional environment in which they work, even if clinical data for their stroke patients show that some of those patients should be given more time and resources.
This is all the more remarkable as Starck's material of choice is, more often than not, the incredibly un-green polycarbonate.
Sean P. Corcoran of New York University and Dr. Levin conducted a study, "School Choice and Competition in the New York City Schools," that showed black and Hispanic students in the city in 2008 tended to rank better-performing schools outside their neighborhood as their first choice, but more often ended up being accepted at local schools more like their middle schools.
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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