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For a non-Japanese speaker, it's hard to decode this performance.
Cynics say the search engines have good reason to make it hard to decode their search criteria.
From inside Uber, it can be hard to decode all the complaints, the anxieties, the general noise and disbelief about its plans, because disruption means exactly that.
She doesn't trade snarky quips with her colleagues, shies away from the ubiquitous cameras, and her expression, as the first models saunter down the runway, is as hard to decode as a tablet of runes.
It was not hard to decode last week's statement by Jacques Chirac, France's president, that, after the American election, Europe has "more need than ever to reinforce its unity and dynamism".
It's not hard to decode McClane's appeal to me back then: I, too, was a budding wiseacre who often felt overwhelmed and even victimized by the (largely benign) forces of the world arrayed against me.
Similar(48)
In recent years, this pattern has been harder to decode, because sequels and reboots have become more commonplace.
Whatever the algorithmic equation, of course, there's a listener on the other end who is much harder to decode.
The motives of the FBI, which has experts capable of examining Mr Kurtz's art scientifically, are harder to decode.
Because of Sade's mercurial emotions and the byzantine complexities of his neuroses, his sentiments for his wife are harder to decode.
The meanings of Mongolian Buddhist artifacts have become harder to decode since the 1920s, when the country's Soviet-backed Communists started executing monks and seizing temples.
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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