Exact(5)
"Passion" is a word that is often uttered on days like yesterday and while I recognise its presence it has, for me, always looked like a sensation that disappears with fatigue.
She then told me that I could make one phone call, the very line that is often uttered to criminals.
It's the sort of word that, if you hear it spoken at all, is often uttered with resigned sarcasm.
Unfortunately, when I encounter conversations about intersectionality online, the term is often uttered merely as cultural shorthand, the social justice equivalent of "You go girl!," ready to be GIFed, Tumbled, or tee-shirted.
Since it is often uttered by service employees to customers at the end of a transaction, particularly in Israel and the United States, its repetitious and dutiful usage has resulted in the phrase developing, according to some, a cultural connotation of impersonality, lack of interest, passive aggressive behavior, or sarcasm.
Similar(55)
"America needs heroes," it is sometimes said, a phrase that's often uttered in a wistful tone, almost cooingly, as if we were talking about a lonely child.
For many years the standard complaint about hotel rooms in New York was, "They're expensive but they're small," often uttered with a "What are you going to do about it?" shrug.
Her most commonly used adjective is "amazing," often uttered just before she stops dead in front of something — an oddly formal pile of sidewalk trash, an unusual detail in a building's façade, a sign with eccentric spelling or grammar — that few other people would notice.
Her most commonly used adjective is "amazing," often uttered just before she stops dead in front of something an oddly formal pile of sidewalk trash, an unusual detail in a building's façade, a sign with eccentric spelling or grammar that few other people would notice.
Spend enough time in Silicon Valley, and of all the buzz words you'll hear neatly tucked in with "graph," "serendipity," and "personalization" is one often uttered though, on the whole, not yet fully understood: "Big Data".
Spend enough time in Silicon Valley, and of all the buzz words you'll hear neatly tucked in with "graph," "serendipity," and "personalization" is one often uttered though, on the whole, not yet fully understood: "Big Data". On the surface, everyone realizes the opportunity.
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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