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But patients with such infections usually have enlarged spleens, something not seen in the affected children, Dr. Pandey said.
"Instead, my ambition in this book is to enlarge that question into something much richer and more nuanced: a tale about the messy realities of race, and the complicated tangle of black and white".
"We have to enlarge the issue to something bigger — we have to do this as a public-private partnership and put the best minds on it.
You knew it was enlarged, but from something just an inch or two high?
Wittgenstein's Poker (Faber £10.99, pp267) by David Edmond and John Eidinow: another of those bright books that take a single moment and enlarges it into something else.
There is clearly a technical sense in which saying that a concept applies to something does not enlarge the concept or change our conception of the being it refers to.
"He had to do something, and he chose to enlarge the problem, beyond the Iraq experience".
Or maybe they enlarge the simple stone shrine and build something bigger, along the lines of Angkor Wat or the Sagrada Familia.
He kissed her breasts, trying to be delicate, trying not to bite as the nipples grew hard, while she pressed into his ear a voice that seemed made up, enlarged and rehearsed, like something in the movies: "Owen, I used to take off my clothes in my room and walk around looking at myself in the mirror, wishing you could see me".
The literal meaning is to make something larger, with the morphology (em- + big + -en) being parallel to that of enlarge (en- + large).
"Enlarge it".
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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