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Bram Stoker's immortality is proving more difficult to pierce than that of his bloodthirsty creation.
"The powerful usually create a cloak of silence around them which, in countries such as Mexico, is particularly difficult to pierce," author Diego Enrique Osorno said.
Learning about suppliers is challenging when the supplier is not local, and the layers of the national food system are difficult to pierce.
It was difficult to pierce the veil of ownership, but I made some headway by collaborating on a reporting project with an investigations team at the Columbia University School of Journalism.
"Yahoo! is under constant attack because it presents the ideal hacker target: It is large and difficult to pierce," says Winkler, who is also the author of "Corporate Espionage".
The skull doesn't decompose the way tissue does, so even after a human has died, it would be actually be quite difficult to pierce a skull with a knife.
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It is difficult for us to pierce them into, for example, a porcine skin, after the insects have been dead.
Mrs. Clinton said nothing about Mr. Obama's recent conclusion that there is no way to stop companies from marketing end-to-end encryption that is very difficult for intelligence agencies to pierce.
I want to pierce my nose.
Pierce the foil all over with a knife, be careful not to pierce the salmon.
Rodman's ears, nose and lips are pierced, but reality fails to pierce his mission.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com