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When I read the phrase "fortunate in the way he could drink" in Colm Toibin's review of "Hiding Man," by Tracy Daugherty (March 22), I immediately reared up.
I read the phrase "wheelchair bound" in several articles.
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Before I read the phrase do it scared I would limit myself.
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I never thought I would read the phrase "rang like a bell" with anything but a yawn.
Yup, when I first read the phrase "Barbaric Cultural Practices Act", I felt sure it was a joke, a line from the "Big Bang Theory" or a Channel 4 mockudrama about Nigel Farage's first premiership.
Now pancakes are the reason why I've read the phrase "PANNY PARTY" and now that I know a PANNY PARTY is something that exists I cannot forget that.
Because I realised I had just read the phrase, "Have you ever had the experience where you thought what you were doing was a good thing but later learned it had hurt someone?
Because I realized I had just read the phrase, "Have you ever had the experience where you thought what you were doing was a good thing but later learned it had hurt someone?
After that, the iPhone will display and "read" the phrase out loud in English "Is there a shuttle bus around here?".
How may times have you heard or read the phrase "looming insolvency" or something similar in discussions of Social Security?
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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