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The beer itself must have steeped the copy of the Michigan Daily and the Girls of the Big Ten issue of Playboy.
Kabaservice is a young history professor, but the others are, in one way or another, longtime Washington insiders — frogs who have steeped for decades in this particular pot of water and, contrary to the cliché, recognized when it reached a level of intolerability.
Cavafy may have steeped himself in history books, but he also read the newspapers: the political consequences of personal and national delusion were all too real to this poet who, from his geographical and intellectual vantage point in a very ancient city, knew that such delusions are paid for in lives.
Here, I have steeped lemon verbena leaves into the syrup, but you can try mint, bay, geranium, a cinnamon stick and so on Another thing I learned in restaurant kitchens was to coat berries in a little of their own puree.
The Argentine movie is the directorial debut of a filmmaker who appears to have steeped himself so thoroughly in Alfred Hitchcock and David Mamet that it's hard to imagine "Nine Queens" having been made without them leering metaphorically over his shoulder.
Strain the flowers after they have steeped.
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(Sir Tom has steeped himself in Chekhov, having adapted "The Seagull" for Sir Peter Hall in 1997).
He had steeped himself in the peerage law and presented his own case.
Adelman, who has steeped himself in early-19th-century England, talks about this.
Lately she has steeped herself in Emily Dickinson's poetry and Emerson's essays.
Ever since the World Cup match, Mr. Doctoroff has steeped himself in his magnificent obsession.
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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