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How long can that spell go unbroken?
When Sarah Silverman performs her first British stand-up show tonight, no taboo will go unbroken.
It is often a frustrating concept in electoral politics that a candidate can't defeat "Santa Claus," and while liberal candidates have most often exploited this fact by promising the most to voters in terms of economic handouts, McCain has promised the voters an awful lot while outlining relatively no dynamic policy changes to assure that these promises go unbroken.
Will more hearts go unbroken?
Then, the expectations of heavier consequence and loftier import: that shoppers will pay for their groceries before they leave the store; that other drivers will stop at the stop sign; that a run through town will go unbroken by IEDs, a sidewalk will be unrattled by nails, and restaurant windows will remain unshattered by bitter reverberations.
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Nonetheless, when the silence behind me had gone unbroken for several minutes, I resolved to address my hosts with a little more civility, and I turned in my chair.
Skiing with the memory of her teammate Régine Cavagnoud in her heart, Péquegnot won the World Cup event as she barged down the course with a resolve that went unbroken no matter how unsettling the circumstances.
But the mood went unbroken, at least until the "Survivor Reunion," which immediately followed the final episode and whose host was a particularly chirpy Bryant Gumbel, who looked as though he had just been voted off the island of Nantucket.
There was outrage at the apparent sympathy vote at work tonight as the Olympic domination of the Russians went unbroken, with the calamitous journey of Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze ending with a pairs gold medal, the 11th consecutive for the country.
They are all outsiders of sorts, marginalized by temperament, history or bad luck -- perpetual visitors, as one puts it, consigned to live in an emotional exile that goes unbroken save for nervous exchanges with others just as disaffected or isolated as they are.
New Zealand yachtsman and explorer who, was the winner of the two most important yachting competitions the Whitbread Round the World Race (1989 90) and the America's Cup (1995 and 2000)—and in 1994 in the ENZA New Zealand won the Jules Verne Trophy when he set a nonstop circumnavigation world record of 74 days 22 hours 17 minutes 22 seconds, which went unbroken for three years.
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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