Your English writing platform
Free sign upSuggestions(1)
Similar(59)
Inevitably, performing in Keynes' library became a kind of archeological dig, in which the layers of the building's history emerged, revealing – perhaps a little unexpectedly – that sometimes the Bloomsbury group actually had fun.
The Sun also ran a page lead that morning, "Kate had dream of where to dig", in which Mrs McCann was alleged to have told a family liaison officer about her dream of where officers should look.
It will have to get its finances in order (the museum has been running deficits), sell its Newport Beach Building, launch a capital campaign, likely find temporary digs in which to hole up during construction and then orchestrate a move.
The England selectors, with a faith that would be deemed commendable in some quarters but feeble in others, have opted to leave well alone and give the Test team the opportunity to demonstrate they are capable of digging holes in which to bury others rather than from which to extricate themselves.
Jeckeln selected a site about 10 km southeast of Riga near the Rumbula railway station, and had 300 Russian prisoners of war prepare the site by digging pits in which to bury the victims.
The forelimbs of Plesiorycteropus show specializations for scratch-digging, in which the forefeet are placed against the substrate, the claws are entered into the substrate, and the forefeet are then drawn back against the body.
Most turtles dig chambers in which the eggs are laid.
They commonly dig burrows in which they rest and avoid weather extremes.
Many species dig holes in which the eggs are placed, whereas others bury them under leaf litter or deposit them in crannies of trees or caves.
Two months ago, a nine-year-old interview was dug up in which Norris unwisely discussed an ancient Greek tradition of older men taking responsibility for the intellectual and sexual education of younger men.
All the other remains found at the site of the Greyfriars church, which was demolished centuries ago after the dissolution of the monasteries, have proved to be female, including the king's nearest neighbour, an elderly woman buried in a sealed lead coffin inside an imposing stone sarcophagus, found just a few feet from the roughly dug hole in which Richard's uncoffined body was laid.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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