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"Silence is praise to thee," Maimonides wrote, quoting from the second verse of Psalm 65.
But the chorus is de-emphasized (the title comes from the second verse), and the best-known part is probably the wordless melody at the beginning and end.
In the chorus lines, she questions herself, "I miss you / But if I got with you, could it feel the same?" From the second verse and onwards, the song finds Knowles "vocalizing an internal battle, alternately desperate and calm", as stated by Joey Guerra of the Houston Chronicle.
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"The melody changed," he tells Freda, "from the first to the second verse – I've never heard that before".
He said, "Originally Drew from The Chainsmokers sang the second verse.
She excoriates, he sweats bullets, and they start again from the top of the second verse.
I was thinking about that, so the second verse came from LA, this person was from LA.
The song begins with an introductory verse from Mill, followed by Ross on the second verse.
This, from the third verse, sounds positively heretical to the work- and productivity-obsessed modern mind.
And it's there from the first verse: The Lord God is One".
John is the visionary among the Evangelists, his philosophical grandeur evident from the first verse ("In the beginning was the Word").
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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