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Her speech to the legal center dwelt at some length on what she views as mistakes of the 1990's, and she was specifically critical of Mr. Clinton's approach to North Korea and to Iran.
For example, Bennett M. Epstein, a lawyer for Officer Sean Carroll, dwelt at length in his opening statement on what he called the suspicious behavior of Mr. Diallo and his failure to obey commands or orders from the officers.
The article dwelt at length on the influence upon Mrs Huffington of a teacher turned Californian guru, called John-Roger, who is credited with the credo, 'use everything to your advantage.' News of Mrs Huffington's summer baby seeped into Liz Smith's gossip column in the tabloid New York Daily News when the pregnancy still had 8 1/2 months to run.
My taxi driver from George Best Belfast City Airport dwelt at length on how visitors to the city increasingly asked him to "take them to where Game of Thrones was made", and locals were eager to talk of how Titanic Belfast, the impressive museum and cultural centre that opened last year, and Game of Thrones were gradually changing people's perceptions of their country.
The same bulletin dwelt at length on Russia's successes earlier in the week in judo, where it landed three gold medals.
The deposed Sugriva dwelt at Rsyamukha hill.
Similar(33)
He abhorred art that dwelt on aesthetics at the expense of social problems.
A colleague who spent hours with Mladic on Mount Igman overlooking Sarajevo in the mid-90s recounted how the general dwelt obsessively and at length on his mother, daughter and sister.
At Muar dwelt Batin Alam, a grandson of Batin Iron-claws.
Certainly if we, as lawyers, (sic) a confession out of one of them. of the horrible and shocking things that go on at X hospital, and the speaker dwelt on specific examples of conduct at that particular hospital, we would not assume that merely the general sad state of medicine was being impugned rather than the doctors and the administrators at that hospital.
At its base were three wells: Urdarbrunnr (Well of Fate), from which the tree was watered by the Norns (the Fates); Hvergelmir (Roaring Kettle), in which dwelt Nidhogg, the monster that gnawed at the tree's roots; and Mímisbrunnr (Mimir's Well), source of wisdom, for the waters of which Odin sacrificed an eye.
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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