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We can use it six times in four phrases, because it's just part of British culture.
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Most of the song is in Monroe's own voice but she needed help in two phrases: "These rocks don't lose their shape, diamonds are a girl's best friend", and at the beginning with a series of high-pitched "nos".
The proof lies in two phrases with which he will always be synonymous.
In one phrase it was "the common man".
The history of capital can be summed up in one phrase: in search of freedom.
But it isn't, and I can prove that in one phrase: "25-cent martini".
"If one could characterize the war in one phrase, this is an un-American war," he declares.
Ms. Lynch said: "There's just so much I think I could encapsulate in one phrase: don't suffer.
In one phrase he ambled with a dragging gait, as if one foot were less able than the other; occasionally he extended either leg in a straight line.
At one point, he grabs the mysterious heroine by the calf, at another point by the thigh, and in one phrase has his head between her legs.
"The attitude behind this sort of thing might be summed up in one phrase: 'I'm telling you,' " Pinter said in 1962.
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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