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But fear, and the awful deeds that fear inspires, are hard to uproot.
Foreign energy companies with existing operations in North Africa might be hard to uproot.
"It was hard to uproot my family and move to Manchester," she says.
"It's very hard to uproot a community," Mrs. Kohen said, adding that the situation had been difficult for the children.
That is how government jobs are distributed in Georgia, and a culture of corruption this thoroughgoing is hard to uproot.
Since it is hard to uproot a chemical factory, these investments, once made, are far more enduring than the flows of "hot" money that whisk in and out of emerging markets.
Similar(48)
The Saudi part of the jihad is home-grown, and thus all the harder to uproot.
One reason we as a society don't try harder to uproot it is that it seems hopeless.
Conservatives said they fear that the health care plan, like Medicare and Medicaid, might be harder to uproot after it set in for several years.
It gets worse: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report this month that cholera in Haiti was evolving into two strains, suggesting the disease would become much harder to uproot and that people who had already gotten sick and recovered would be vulnerable again.
All the while, more housing units were being built in the settlements, making them that much bigger, that much more steadfast, and that much harder to uproot.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com