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Discover LudwigThe phrase "infamous past" is commonly used in written English.
You can use it to describe a situation where a person, place, event, or thing has a history of notoriety or notoriety. For example, "The castle has an infamous past, having witnessed some of the most notorious crimes in the area."
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BUT buyers who inadvertently end up with a house with an infamous past cannot blame the real estate agent.
Cleansing the cavernous West Chelsea club of its infamous past, Spirit hopes to provide entertainment through enlightenment.
The building has an infamous past: it was built in the 1930s as a villa for Haj Amin al-Husseini, then the grand mufti of Jerusalem, who notoriously aligned himself with Hitler.
Telling fans that the cup dates back to 1473, she explained how it is a "logistical nightmare for the host nation" and laid out how the tournament works, also providing some details of infamous past contests.
The Pavlensky burger will come in four varieties, with each alluding to one of the artist's infamous past performances – whether wrapping himself naked in barbed wire, setting fire to the door of the FSB security service's headquarters, or sewing his lips in a protest against Kremlin policies.
Along with some of the infamous past alerts came bureaucratic fumbling.
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These days the Fresh Kills landfill is somewhere between its infamous, stinking past and its future as Freshkills Park, a 2,200-acre 2,200-acremeadows and wetlands and a strange-looking name.
During the primary campaign, Paladino became infamous for past comments that were considered racially offensive and forwarding racially and sexually explicit e-mails.
James Hunter of Rolling Stone noted that, "the excellent current single 'Scream' or the first-rate R&B ballad 'You Are Not Alone' – manage to link the incidents of Jackson's infamous recent past to universal concepts like injustice or isolation.
We could write more about her tattoos and her hilarious boyfriend and her infamous Lower East Side past but we want to run these pictures really big so we're going to stop now.
Journalists will practice in front of mirrors (so they don't break down into peals of laughter) asking questions such as: "So what do you think about Trump's idea of just going ahead and forcibly annexing Cuba?" In fact, the most infamous of past Trumpisms could also provide an interesting campaign moment.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com