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Hang on.
To wait (for a short time); to hold on.
Exact(22)
"I go, 'The [expletive] Nationals?!' " Guardado, who was now trying to hang on with, of all teams, the Nationals, told him.
Hang on with me for a paragraph or two as I set it up.
That way you have one hand to hang on with and one to cut with.
Springsteen, arguably the most trusting musician when it comes to his fans, falls backwards into a sea of mostly baby boomers and Gen Xers, who hang on with one hand, while snapping selfies with the other.
"Zafar's been brilliant all year and again he showed what a class performer he is but, unfortunately for us, no-one could hang on with him".
Half of that time is spent on climbing walls, while other training focuses on core strength or on sessions on a wooden finger board, where climbers, sometimes weighted, hang on with their feet hanging free to train their grip strength.
Similar(37)
But the all-wheel-drive R32 has a few tricks up its sleeve, one of which is that it hangs on with tenacious grip.
Of the two draws, one was washed out and in the other, Queensland hung on with two wickets in hand when time ran out.
Ms Rice's friends say she hangs on with grim resolve until the facts prove her wrong, at which point she moves on.
Douglas fell to the beam, then hung on with her arms to swung under it with her momentum to break her fall.
Be met by either a young employee who appears to still be in college or an older person who seems to have hung on with tenure.
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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