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"True happiness," he counseled, "comes from doing what you ought to do," referring to God's will.
A simple invitation will do, referring to the small ceremony and its geographical remoteness.
Or call it Groundhog Day, as some people here do, referring to the movie whose protagonist woke up to the same day over and over again.
And a proactive misrepresentation that makes me uncomfortable had developed when Mr. Berry or his associate asked straight out, "What do you do?" Referring to a pastime of his, Mr. Eichenwald said he replied, "I write music".
In his shop on the Upper West Side, Casella, who is a native of Tuscany's Maremma region, talked about diversity and terroir the way wine and cheese connoisseurs do, referring to the earth, the vegetation, the air, and even the microbes of the terrain.
Although the church has always seen itself as Christian, she said, its image has been "cloaked" by distinctive practices -- like building temples, as Mormons still do; referring to members as "the gathering of Israel," as church leaders once did; and, most controversially, sanctioning polygamy, which the church ended more than a century ago.
Similar(49)
Scientologists do refer to a "creed" and "sermons", he conceded, "but it's not religious worship.
Abstract mass nouns, if they do refer, do not, prima facie, refer to physical stuffs or hunks of stuff.
For within the context of the relevant pretense, the singular terms involved do refer to things.
Do refer to things that are messy as "Dresden".
Do refer information seekers to your leader in a polite manner.
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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