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"Babylon" is a cryptic term indicating Rome, and it is the understanding utilized in Revelation 14 8; 16:19; 17:5, 6 and in the works of various Jewish seers.
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Instead of naming the hospitals, the bill describes them in cryptic terms, so that identifying a beneficiary is like solving a riddle.
Then he'd record the gist of that day's story in simple, cryptic terms that were sure to baffle anyone who might read the diary later.
Then there are the citations of the Old Testament to be found in the books of the Apocrypha and apocalyptic literature (works describing the intervention of God in history in cryptic terms), in the works of Philo and Josephus, in the New Testament, and in rabbinic and patristic (early Church Fathers) literature.
Pierre Avril, in an article in Le Figaro headlined "Putin continues his grand manoeuvres", says that "Worse still for Brussels and Washington, Moscow is now alluding in cryptic terms to its desire to press its advantage beyond the peninsula".
In the spirit of Hoback's piece, I explored some of the cryptic terms, conditions, and privacy policies of some of the leading web sites.
This entails remote and voice control of boats, trains, and other vehicles as well as, in the cryptic terms of the Kickstarter campaign, "embedded cameras".
Axis of Power, Stratachrome, Holcene, Emergence of Perception these cryptic terms sound like they could be the names of some esoteric theories in fundamental physics, but they refer to an impressive body of works by David Spriggs.
By Patrick Di Justo June 7, 2013 This week's revelation that the National Security Agency has been collecting call records from Verizon, A.T. & T., and Sprint about every phone call placed on their networks — even wholly domestic calls — has sent chills down the spines of many Americans, a number of whom have heard for the first time the cryptic technical term at the center of the story: metadata.
This week's revelation that the National Security Agency has been collecting call records from Verizon, A.T. & T., and Sprint about every phone call placed on their networks — even wholly domestic calls — has sent chills down the spines of many Americans, a number of whom have heard for the first time the cryptic technical term at the center of the story: metadata.
The term "cryptic climatic adaptation" was coined by Panetta and Mitchell [9] to describe the ability some species may possess to grow in climates outside that of their native range.
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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