Exact(12)
There's a great ambiguity about that line.
The conditions of non-detection, for dip shorter than 1 cycle, are analytically calculated and a great ambiguity for a dip even shorter than 2 cycles is shown.
Despite several Supreme Court rulings, religious displays — whether of crèches, crosses, menorahs or the Ten Commandments — remain a subject of great ambiguity, civil liberties lawyers say.
This is where the Great Recession has taken the world's largest economy, to a Great Ambiguity over what lies ahead, and what can be done now.
It is all "a category of great ambiguity, little amenable to definition".To drive home the vagaries of past faith, he writes about "Lindow Man", a preserved male body found in a peat bog in Cheshire in 1984.
Personally observing microcosms in which we can appreciate the precepts in action enables us to carry them with us for application when we face our own times of great ambiguity, urgency, and stress.
Similar(48)
That's one of the great ambiguities and I don't know if it has to do with women alone, or men and women.
Greater ambiguity would certainly strengthen the play intellectually.
But individuals with experience using scorecards can learn to adapt to greater ambiguity.
Follow-up analyses revealed that the effect was due, at least in part, to the greater ambiguity of e-mail versus voice communication (Study 3).
The results indicate that online marketplaces are more likely to serve an industry with (a) a higher cost of searching for technologies in that industry, (b) greater ambiguity about the underlying technology's potential applications across industries, and (c) greater ability to protect inventions from expropriation.
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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