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[I] cried to Heaven… [10 November] …I am grievously tried, with the threatening Sickness of my discreet, pious, lovely Daughter Katharin.
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This is someone who claims to support the international consensus for a diplomatic resolution of the Israel-Palestine conflict, but 1) refuses to actually help bring it about, or more grievously 2) actively tries to obstruct the efforts of others to help bring it about.
Yet anyone who doubts his standing here in Brewster County need only come in August to the county courthouse in Alpine, Tex., when a defendant is scheduled to be tried on state felony charges for grievously wounding Clay Henry in a knife attack.
Three hours into the journey, a 25-year-old Moroccan man with Isis connections, Ayoub El-Khazzani, began rampaging through the carriages armed with a pistol, a Kalashnikov, 270 rounds of ammunition and half a litre of petrol, eventually shooting and grievously wounding a Franco-American man, Mark Moogalian, who tried to stop him.
Mr. Dole, who had been grievously wounded in World War II, had himself sometimes emphasized his biography and had certainly tried to run against Mr. Clinton's character.
She was grievously wounded, and the militants vowed they would try again until they had killed her.
"In a society where there's lots of free speech, it's certainly permissible for private entities, as opposed to public ones, to try and say: 'Look, this person has wronged us grievously,' " said Dan Markel, a law professor at Florida State University.
For Xi, this grievously undermines the scrubbed image of rectitude that his anti-corruption watchdogs are trying to uphold.
I am sure that spending a vacation in the company of such people may well be very trying, but that is no reason to misrepresent the English town of Chatham so grievously.
Fincher tries to repair this by giving us the familiar apparatus of obsession: his wife (a grievously under-used Chloë Sevigny) starts to look at him stonily - when he announces to the world that he is writing a book about Zodiac, and they start getting anonymous phone-calls, she takes the not unreasonable view that he's putting his hobby ahead of the family.
I tend to embrace my inner Caden Cotard, the theater director played by Philip Seymour Hoffman in Charlie Kaufman's "Synecdoche, New York," a grievously underloved film about life and death and every agonized and beautiful thing in between, including art and the scratch-scratch of those who are trying to leave their marks on the world.
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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