Exact(16)
But it was apparently the only company that expressed a real interest.
But it expressed a real and legitimate anguish, and it happens to be a great poem.
But the rise of nationalism expressed a real feeling: the gap between disillusion with 'an increasingly demoralised Great Britain' and 'oil-fired expectations at a Scottish level'.
The summary of Mr. Gutiérrez's comments, written by the United States ambassador to Mexico, Carlos Pascual, continued: "He expressed a real concern with 'losing' certain regions.
"Like Ennahda in Tunisia, they are new, haven't cheated people and have expressed a real need for change," said Mounir Ferram, a political analyst.
Later, Nungesser turned the trip into a parable one that may have drifted from the truth but that nonetheless expressed a real difference between the Coast Guard and the Gulf communities in how each regarded the oil.
Similar(44)
In its place, express a real emotion -- good, bad or indifferent.
It is Catholics such as Gearty and abuse victim Graham Wilmer who express a real wish for change and justice from the church, rather than hector.
But while the safety goal of once in 100,000 years expresses a real number, the component failure numbers are yardsticks that may be wrong.
"By the same token, people who express concern about children being in detention, that doesn't mean they're soft on border protection, that just means that they're expressing a real human concern".
When Adam Davidson writes, "In Europe, where taxes keep gas prices well above $5 a gallon, citizens are more likely to take public transportation and live near the center of town," what he's doing is expressing a real "let them eat cake" attitude.
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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