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His extraordinary life meant that he often began stories with sentences of this kind.
He was drunk much of the time; he often began drinking at breakfast and his brother counted 17 Scotch-and-sodas in a day.
He often began a speech in fusha, and then sprinkled in Egyptian, until, by the climax, he was declaiming entirely in the language of the people.
He often began with a relatively simple subject and a brief first draft, but fresh ideas came crowding in during composition until finally the story expanded far beyond his first intention.
Second, conservators have found he often began paintings by putting down bright colors, but then added subtle glazes of brown or black, veils thrown over the pictures, to give them evenness and sobriety, a process overlooked or misunderstood by earlier restorers, who thought they were revealing the true Eakins by removing these glazes and exposing the bright colors underneath.
The show comes with two discoveries: that Eakins occasionally projected photographs with the aid of a magic lantern and traced the projections; and that he often began paintings by putting down bright colors, but then added subtle glazes of brown or black to give the pictures evenness and sobriety, a process overlooked or misunderstood by restorers in the past.
Similar(53)
The journalist Michael Lewis picked it up when researching his 1999 book "The New New Thing": "When a computer programmer answers a question," he wrote, "he often begins with the word 'so".' Microsoft employees have long argued that the "so" boom began with them.
When a cabby sees a pregnant woman, he often begins to shout, "Emergency!
He often begins a lesson by saying, "You're at Carnegie Hall, and it's your début.
He often begins meetings by barking out, "Whose nickel?" (meaning "Why are we here?").
When Mr. Andersen gives speeches, he often begins with the line, "Hi, my name is Martin Andersen.
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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