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Discover Ludwig'further paragraphs' is considered correct and usable in written English.
It is most commonly used to refer to the upcoming portion of a written text. For example, "In the following paragraphs we will discuss more about the topic at hand."
Exact(1)
Also, two further paragraphs of quotes from the Unesco spokeswoman were appended to the article to clarify its position on the Virunga national park and the process for boundary changes to world heritage sites.
Similar(59)
One further paragraph hints at the desire to be self-sufficient in the future by "raising a knowledgeable Islamic generation capable of bearing the Ummah [Islamic Nation] and its future without needing the expertise of the west".
However, if a GP explicitly requests the results from spirometry they will be provided (see further paragraph "ethical considerations").
33 A series of pathophysiological studies provided additional evidence documenting that subtle alterations of the HPA axis can be detected in abdominal obesity 34 (see further paragraph).
A few paragraphs further on, he tells his captain that people like them will not be able to halt the depredation of the planet.
Nonetheless, it has always been hard to proceed very far in exploring a complex topic without anticipating the intimidating drop of the guillotine a dozen or so paragraphs further on.
Read a few paragraphs further down, though, and the article reveals that — for all of Numenta's billing as a one-size-fits-all automatic solver — Grok is "still in limited release, with just a few customers in the fields of energy, media, and video processing".
The following paragraphs further examine this aspect, as it seems instructive to illustrate the similarities and differences between the ways in which RRI and neoliberalism define responsibility.
In the next paragraphs further analysis will be presented to explain what at first seems to be counterintuitive results that are to some degree inconsistent with the data.
Starting with a simple "hello" might be boring, but going paragraphs further than that is just as boring especially if you're just talking about your day.
With this passage, my eye was going over Spenlow so quickly, the author Dickens's attention to the details of Spenlow's appearance so hurriedly provided and then moved from, left behind for the next detail and then the next...and with such ravishing color and noisy precision...that I was a couple of paragraphs further along before I realized the wondrous manner in which Spenlow had been described.
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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