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Discover Ludwig"have pertinence" is not a commonly used phrase in written English.
The more commonly used phrase is "have relevance." However, "pertinence" can be used as a noun in a sentence to mean relevance or applicability. For example: - The new evidence presented in the case has great pertinence to the final verdict. - The question asked by the student had no pertinence to the topic being discussed. - The ideas presented in the article have little pertinence to our current situation.
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Unlike many flamenco singers, she is not content simply to sing old songs; the lyrics must have pertinence today.
It may be painful for Mets fans to recall, but it may have pertinence to tonight's opening game against the Cardinals in the National League Championship Series.
Many of them also have pertinence for UNICEF's intensified focus on equitable development and the rights of the most depived children and families.
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That the work, about money and war, has pertinence to the news of the day goes without saying.
The story has pertinence because one of the teams involved in that tournament game of March 22 , 1992 Southwest Missouri State, will be facing Rutgers tonight.
His present Whitney survey, emphatically titled "Richard Artschwager!" arrives without such packaging and positioning, though there's no question that the artist has pertinence to things going on today.
How and why they did so is the subject of "The Artful Recluse: Painting, Poetry, and Politics in 17th-Century China," a compelling show at Asia Society — and a highlight of this year's Asia Week New York — that applies a magnifying glass to a familiar theme and reveals a weave of moral assertion and private emotion that has pertinence for new art today.
We have demonstrated that miR-143 and -145 are important regulators of plasticity of vascular smooth muscle cells, which has pertinence for the pathogenesis of vascular disease.
"Yogi Berra does have some pertinence here," said Professor Friedland, referring to the baseball legend's dictum that "it ain't over till it's over".
And there are several even more rubbish tweets which you can find for yourself if this story still seems to have any pertinence by the time you read this.
Because these standards have strong pertinence and better practicality, they have been promoted in many countries and been adopted by the IEC Committee as an international standard.
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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