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Any of these near misses may break through soon, or, who knows, the new year may herald something completely different.
All the banging and crashing and ringing and shouting always seems to herald something special but so rarely delivers.
AS IRAN prepares to choose a new president from a selection of eight carefully vetted candidates (and searches in vain for affordable vodka), this week's issue of The Economist ponders who might win, bids good riddance to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and argues that the election could herald something better.
By definition a sort of blaring thing that distinguishes itself from its surroundings, a beacon calls attention to itself, but more importantly serves to herald something else.
The CERN result may indeed herald something new and remarkable.
Therefore, in removing the unknown and asking the question, it would herald something of a breakthrough.
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David: But her stay heralded something else, a sign from the gods.
In its specificity and its quiet power — the small moment heralding something larger and more important — this passage feels almost cinematic.
Good corporate news and rock-bottom interest rates may be seen as feeble protectors of share values if the Greece crisis heralds something worse.
But there's good reason: this event heralds something that is almost as rare as the arrival of the new millennium.
Those distorted guitar chords went on to rearrange the sonic architecture of the 1960s – but frontman Ray Davies's lyrics also heralded something new and profound.
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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