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Auden was, as a poet, far more copious and varied than Eliot and far more uneven.
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In contrast, about 900 units a year were introduced during the downturn, Ms. Mack said And while that extra supply might seem copious, far more would be needed to slake the newfound appetite for this type of housing; the scarcity is even putting upward pressure on prices, she said.
In the case of lines far more lubriciously explicit than these, Wills embraces the Roman poet's copious Latin obscenities in tumescent Anglo-Saxon translations, and in this sense certainly conveys the authentic Martial.
In the early 1930s, Mr. Wilson was consuming more than two quarts of rotgut whiskey daily, a definite health risk according to Alexander Lambert, who found in his copious research that consumers of cheap or bootlegged alcohol were far more prone to seizures, delirium tremens and brain damage than those who drank the expensive stuff.
The Super Bowl was tedious, what with commercials and timeouts, but the blessed clicker allowed me to watch copious segments of John Sayles's "Matewan" and two reruns of "The Sopranos," getting far more out of them than from the assorted punters and strutters and babblers from Florida.
Far more.
After midnight, there are more kids with backpacks outside and even more copious smoking.
DVD film releases got a lot more interesting -- and more copious -- in 2005.
But far more useful.
And sometimes far more.
About far more things?
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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