Exact(4)
The Schumann piece (which Christian Zacharias played superbly at Alice Tully Hall earlier this year) was a shock from the first phrase; Levin rang out the rapid, leaping triplets evenly and clearly rather than playing them as the whirling blur found even in some of the best recordings.
He added that commuters would see the benefit right from the first phrase as the new line would take some of the capacity pressure off of the routes into Euston station in London which were currently congested.
LB prosodic cues: (1) clearer downstepping from the first phrase to the second phrase, followed by moving up of pitch from the second phrase to the third phrase; (2) longer pause between the second noun and its particle ("no"), inside the second phrase; and (3) longer final segment duration in the second phrase.
RB prosodic cues: (1) No clear downstepping from the first phrase to the second phrase, followed by downstepping from the second phrase to the third phrase; (2) longer pause between the first and second phrases; and (3) longer final segment duration in the first phrase.
Similar(56)
And right through the set, from the first phrases to the last, he showed gut-and-bone pleasure in the basic process of pushing and pulling his band.
From the first phrases sung by Kara Shay Thomson, a compelling American soprano with a plush, vibrant, powerful voice, you do not know whether to pity or fear her.
But from the first phrases of the orchestral sinfonia that begins the piece, played with crisp but unexaggerated articulation of the dotted-note rhythms, the music-making was beguilingly natural.
REMMA is capable of using several types of resources, whether specialized almanacs (for example, a list with the names of the most common clinical problems), or semantic categories extracted from the analysis of the first phrase of a Wikipedia article.
From the moment I wrote the first phrase I was sure the book was the tool that was going to help me free myself from things I was carrying within me for a long time.
The first phrase was directly from the first line of "If" (but omitted the accompanying words "and blaming it on you"), but the second phrase does not follow the first in the poem, unless Kipling had forgotten to write the intervening 29 lines.
Repeat and re-write the first phrase until you can recite it from memory.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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