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Its main practical use is to give cues to sections or individual players about when to enter and when to cut off, often with a pointed index finger.
Let's go back to basics: to snip, from the German snippen, originally meant "to snatch quickly" and came to mean "to clip or cut off, often with a scissors".
If you go over the specification, you will be cut off, often right in the middle of a word.
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A soft-voiced, often humorous man who wore half-glasses, he often warned lawyers not to raise their voices, and often cut off those who he thought were badgering witnesses.
For instance, credit-card companies already often cut off merchants who incur a lot of complaints from customers.
Their calls are recorded and often cut off.
Imagine for a moment a child in a remote, poor and even hostile part of the world, a place where services are nonexistent and access often cut off.
A very sharp blade at a sharp angle allows twigs to be cut off and often to remain caught in the space between the blade and tail.
Many rural Nicaraguans lacked electricity and running water, so there was no great harm done when "se fue la luz" ― the electricity was cut off, as often happened when the contras attacked a power generator.
Being cut off was often a blow to my psychological health; not only because of things like low temperatures, a stank fridge or the darkness that could bring about depression, but also because of what living in that kind of condition told me about myself.
(Some years ago John McLaughlin showed me a tape to illustrate what he'd noticed — that Eleanor Clift was cut off far more often than the men on his show).
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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