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It swoons from a surfeit of good taste.
FOR decades Thai politics suffered from a surfeit of pragmatism.
Both countries are suffering from a surfeit of democracy.
The world, he says, is suffering from a surfeit of democracy.
"Edward the Caresser" suffers from a surfeit of trivial information at the expense of narrative.
With Charlie Adam suspended, Walter Smith had had to choose from a surfeit of holding midfielders.
Mr. Spader is not the only speaker suffering from a surfeit of grandiloquence.
Similar(4)
If a point represents a helpful step along the road to Crystal Palace's escape from relegation a surfeit of commendable effort was never going to be enough to offer Gus Poyet's 19th-placed side the victory they desperately needed ahead of a daunting run in.
Yet from that came a surfeit of specificity: his precise grooming, his distant manner, his slightly nervous yet menacing grin, his flat affect, with a voice that the actor once described as "coming out the back end of a drainpipe".
Henry I died in France in 1135 – famously, according to his physician, from gorging on "a surfeit of lampreys" – but his body was sent back for burial in the abbey he founded, stitched into a bull's hide.
It was redrafted in 1216, 1217, and 1225, and confirmed in English law in 1297 – 81 years after John's death rumoured from dysentery or a surfeit of peaches.
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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