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Idiom
To cover for someone.
To make.
Exact(6)
Walters had worked in New York for a month previously, as cover for someone in the New York office, so he knew what to expect.
If I occasionally have to cover for someone who's going to a PTA meeting, that's my contribution to raising the next generation.
When you work overtime, it helps to know who that's with, and if you have to step in to cover for someone, your hidden co-founder will find it easier to support when it's someone they know and care about, too.
It's hard to cover for someone who's disrespectful and ungrateful.
It's no surprise that people lie to save face, but there had been much less research on people lying to cover for someone else.
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Similar(6)
To cover up for someone else: If someone else has committed a crime, let them pay for it.
Skiverton added: "But he's someone who could cover very well for someone like Paul Wotton".
The 70s disco artist Sylvester was friends with Haring, who did a 12-inch cover for his song "Someone Like You".
She's right ― the cover isn't bad for someone who runs a successful app, emoji line, pulled in $160 million in revenue from one video game and raked in a cool $52.5 million in 2015.
Apple legal likes to talk a big game but when it comes to actually suing folks – unless it's some pet project of Steve's or it's about hackintoshes – but usually it likes to keep its ass covered and then waits for someone to pop up with some really egregious examples before it starts up the old thresher.
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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