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This has a very precise meaning.
Although we may use the word in everyday language, to psychologists phobia has a very precise meaning.
"I don't think we could define her as a Marxist," ponders Vezzoli, "but she clearly has a very precise and ambitious cultural vision.
Not surprisingly, Nelson has a very precise relationship to language — and to the vicissitudes of personal history, including the self-mythologizing that goes into making a transformed self.
The Chinese regime has a very precise sense of balance, and it is no coincidence that Shaikh's execution took place now; he was the first European citizen to be put to death in China in more than half a century.
The statement "evolution is the language of the cosmos" by Paz-y-Miño and Espinosa (2009) is a wonderful metaphor, but biological evolution has a very precise meaning.
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CHAI TIME I have a very precise tea routine.
When Jean Laporte opened L'Artisan in 1976, he had a very precise idea about what he wanted.
"The rented flats had a very precise specification," said a senior Serbian official involved in the Mladic hunt.
I think I probably read something like it a long time ago, but I don't have a very precise recollection of whatever it was that I read.
"One of the first things you learn about with chimpanzees is they have a very precise power structure within a group," Mr. Marsh said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com