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Errands, a concierge service in Manhattan.
Television ads consistently showed the Explorer going on adventurous trips, traveling over rock fields and mountain tracks, instead of running errands, a much more common use.
Mr. Davis runs as many as 35 errands a day for other residents, such as trying to buy hard liquor on a Sunday.
When the train stops, spending about a week at most destinations, its residents can take a circus bus to town to explore and do errands; a few have cars and motorcycles that are hauled on the train's flatbed freight cars.
FOR all the reasons it may make sense to rent a car — a carless household facing a gaggle of errands, a temporary need for a second vehicle, the appeal of driving something more economical on a vacation — there are still drivers who resist the drill of stepping up to a rental counter.
He started by designing swag for small businesses, then finding a cofounder online and cold-calling investors about the duo's would-be business, Viatask, which aimed to enable people to outsource their errands a la TaskRabbit.
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In the shadowy art of supercar equivalencies, that's roughly the difference between one SL65 in the garage or an SL63 and, for slower errands, an SLK55.
In 1987, Carver wrote "Errand," a story about the death of Chekhov, his literary idol.
To make her errand a bit easier she brought a poem that she had written to show him.
The excursion began with an important errand: a swing into Birch Hill Market, in the hamlet of Locust Valley, to order two turkeys.
This version of the dance gets a shortened title, "Errand" — a punctilio that the deviations from the original seem too minor to justify.
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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