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In the 1950s and 60s, however, Nelson Goodman (1955) and Karl Popper (1965) were attempting to sort out the linkage between dispositions, subjunctives, and laws from distinctive points of view.
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As per, the show's distinctive point-of-view filming style allowed for some absolute gems.
The novel is divided into acts, like a drama, with the principal players — Williams, Walker, Walker's unhappy wife, Aida, Williams's even unhappier wife, Lottie — repeatedly breaking in to speak from their distinctive points of view.
Such a dictionary, it was argued, would be a "historical monument"; it would represent "the history of a nation" recounted from a distinctive "point of view".
Mr. Osborn said Belvedere had a "very distinctive point of view that's different from the product angle and the user angle.
But the way to go from blog obscurity to blog-around-town is to blog often and have a distinctive point of view.
And the "News-Page Column," the form that Mr. Bai and Mr. Weber deploy, calls for a "distinctive point of view".
But the Times news pages increasingly are home to "voices," not merely reportage, as editors commission work bearing the author's distinctive point of view.
Places with a distinctive point of view come along much less often, and kitchens that express that point of view convincingly are rare in any neighborhood at any time.
His book, too, comes with a distinctive point of view, and he is by no means inclined to give Mendelssohn an easy time of anything.
Apatow likes to watch, but not with a Chancelike passivity: he brings a distinctive point of view, a hard-nosed worldly wisdom to his subjects.
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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