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He plays with the word "fail" as a popular new interjection on the Web, and he likes it: "It evokes a faceless authority passing judgment, and summons up an image of a big rubber stamp coming down on a test or report".
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It feels barely edited, a scrapbook of images and ideas, memories, autobiographical interjections on collecting.
My only serious quibble is with the frequent instructional interjections on the art of tying a scarf.
Between Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr., the Strokes guitar assault was invigorating, with Mr. Valensi's huge, pealing, almost stupid riffs on "Under Cover of Darkness" and Mr. Hammond's nimble '50s rock interjections on "Last Nite".
In "You've Been a Good Ole Wagon," as Smith taunts her ex, praising the talents of her new lover, Armstrong almost upstages her with interjections on his muted cornet, mimicking the discarded fellow with sobbing, growling, and stuttering effects that resolve into supple arpeggios.
Think of how the swirling strings and plucked violins on ABC's The Look of Love heighten the song's poignancy, or the drama of the brass interjections on Love's Maybe the People Would Be the Times or Between Clark and Hilldale, and you can hear the impact an inspired arrangement has on a song.
In the 1940s, actors dispatched on publicity duty could just stop by radio shows like NBC's Kraft Music Hall, exchange five minutes of patter with crooning compere Bing Crosby or Al Jolson and endure the announcer's periodic interjections on the simple joys of Philadelphia cream cheese.
Since industrial revolutions during the last three hundred years, there have been limited and short lived interjections on the ideas of economies of scope.
But while the lilting 'Song For Bobby' fits the ramshackle eclecticism of Jukebox like a glove, the rather presumptuous interjection of 'Pretend' is an unnecessary bump on the Dusty road.
Nor is it a time to quibble, to raise trivial critique or interjection based on issues that are micro.
In a few years' time, the use of fail as an interjection caught on to such an extent that particularly egregious objects of ridicule required an even stronger barb: major fail, überfail, massive fail or, most popular of all, epicfail.
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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