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He once read the Random House Dictionary, back to front.
The way he once read word books to improve his vocabulary for broadcasting, he now perused home and garden magazines.
He once read about a terrible accident in which several young women were killed.
He would hate homosexuals, he confesses, but he once read that this might indicate latent homosexuality.
He talks about something he once read that has always stuck with him.
For several years, he wrote poetry on scraps of paper; he once read a long poem aloud to Oliver James, who considered it astonishingly good.
Similar(44)
It was a phrase he'd once read in a men's magazine, while waiting to get a root canal.
The idea for it arose when his life changed and a short story he'd once read struck him anew.
A stranger, remembering something he'd once read (by Foucault?), might decide that this was how power constructed the discourse, by staking out the territory and framing the debate.
There is one sitting in my carriage right now as I type this on the underground and he hasn't once read over my shoulder, dropped his wet umbrella on my leg or stuck his smelly armpit in my face.
"I once read," he writes, "that Our Sages of Blessed Memory had the idea that we have one tiny bone in the body, above the end of the spine — they call it the 'Luz.' You can't kill it, it doesn't crumble after death and can't be destroyed by fire.
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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