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There are four layers of markings in "Mural," and many of them implicitly refer to the history of finance capitalism — maps, trade routes, population shifts, financial institutions, the growth of cities. Mehretu pointed to several bold, curving, orange and blue lines.
They are about people who are, or who are trying to be, graphic novelists, and they all follow, or implicitly refer to, a kind of ur-narrative, which upon examination proves to be, with small variations, the real-life story of almost everyone who goes into this line of work.
He has gone so far as to implicitly refer to Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of Turkey and a notoriously heavy drinker, as a "drunkard," and in one of a series of speeches he delivered Sunday to cheering supporters, accused protesters of taking beer into mosques.
(This is true, of course, only so long as the concept of using does not implicitly refer to the intention of the user) (Alexander and Ferzan 2012).
Predicates that implicitly refer to the class that they were to determine if such a class existed, do not determine a class.
15 An exception is the use of standardization through (11) which implicitly refer to the practise of the 'NPL score' test statistic (Kruglyak et al. 1996; Ängquist, 2007).
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She is implicitly referring to Barack Obama, but there is a group of people scattered across America for whom the words carry a deeply personal resonance.
Mr. Biden implicitly referred back to tragedy in his own life when his first wife and infant daughter died in a car accident.
"If we don't understand what the tactics are, we cannot really identify them when children may be implicitly referring to us about the kind of things they get up to when they are interacting online with others," said Lorenzo-Dus.
So too does Eduard Gorokhovsky's Bitsa – a depiction of the open-air art market of the time which implicitly refers back to the notorious day in 1962 when Khrushchev ordered an exhibition of abstract art at Bitsa to be smashed.
Brown, in his victory speech, implicitly referred to a decisive moment in the campaign when the moderator in a debate asked him how, given his views on healthcare reforms, he could sit in "Ted Kennedy's seat" – a description repeatedly used by Coakley in the campaign.
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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