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Rosewood is hard to bend and very expensive, so you cannot make mistakes.
Davis said his back was "jammed up," and admitted, "It's hard to bend over and pick stuff up".
Her abdomen grew so full of fluid that it was hard to bend to tie her shoes.
But he found it hard to bend in his arguments and refused to match his opponents' tactics of caucusing and ear-bending before crucial debates.
In testing, the changes seem to have made the phone extra robust — it will bend, but only when people try very hard to bend it.
Vibranium is strong in all senses of the word — hard to bend, hard to break and hard to dent or scratch.
Similar(35)
Thermal fluctuations induce small wrinkles, which make membranes harder to bend but easier to stretch like in a crumpled paper.
If you're overweight, or even of normal weight, you'll have trouble achieving that, because body fat elides the separations between parts and makes it harder to bend them.
In tennis, with notable exceptions such as Boris Becker or Patrick Rafter, big players find it harder to bend down for the volley; in the confined quarters of a squash court, tall players may trip over their own feet; on the badminton court it is agility and speed that count, hence the supremacy of the Chinese and Indonesians.
But I also knew that it was far harder to bend one's tongue to accommodate the American ear than to assimilate.
Experts say the reading curve is harder to bend because reading better reflects at-home factors — by kindergarten, a student born in a home of educated, English-speaking parents has probably been exposed to far more words and books than peers who weren't.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com