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In the ensuing frenzy — a local paper gets wind of the story — he is forced to wrestle with fundamental beliefs about human existence.
Such was the ensuing frenzy of sightings – and photographs (including the legendary image of a long-necked plesiosaurean taken by a London surgeon and later proved to be a hoax) – that by April 1938 Virginia Woolf was writing to her sister, Vanessa Bell, of a "charming couple" they'd met at a lochside hotel "who were in touch … with the Monster.
In the ensuing frenzy, Paul Ryan jumps over several desks, stiff arming cabinet secretaries, Supreme Court Justices, and Marco Rubio, and then falls on the coin and swallows it — only to look up and see Obama twirling a second coin in his hand.
Amid the ensuing frenzy, legendary broadcaster Vin Scully described the tournament's finish to a national audience as "impossible!" (This was nearly nine years before Scully would use the same adjective to depict Kirk Gibson's dramatic home run in the World Series in what would become one of sports' most celebrated calls).
It's possible that the difference between 90% and 70% was not enough to unleash a search for short term profits over long term growth and an ensuing frenzy of speculation.
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The ensuing media frenzy consumed Biden's campaign, and he decided to withdraw, making the announcement at noon on September 23rd.
When permanent jobs come up, the ensuing feeding frenzy sees hundreds of applications from superbly qualified candidates.
The ensuing cleanup frenzy was so intense that the government ran out of barrels, creating a black market that increased the barrel price fivefold.
The writers of the 19th century aroused interest in the Mona Lisa, but the theft of the painting in 1911 and the ensuing media frenzy brought it worldwide attention.
In the ensuing tabloid frenzy, she has remained composed and surprisingly dignified, appearing in public only to announce, via the front page of People magazine, that she recently became a single parent, after adopting a "perfect" three-year-old boy called Louis.
Suddenly he was a public figure, and the ensuing media frenzy forced him to abort his studies at the Royal Agricultural College, Cirencester, a finishing school of sorts for the landed gentry that focuses its studies more on horses and the fields they are ridden in (a typical degree: equine management) than the liberal arts one might pursue at Oxford or Cambridge.
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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