Exact(1)
The instrumentalist says that in an utterance of "the number of apples is two", the speaker is merely pretending to assert something; nothing is really asserted.
Similar(58)
Hobby Lobby is really asserting two religious beliefs: that abortion is immoral and that the kinds of contraception it doesn't want to pay for are, in fact, a form of abortion, even though the scientific evidence says they are not.
Part of what this study is really asserting is that the notion of women defining their own standard of beauty for themselves is perceived as a dangerous and harmful thing.
Ginsburg resolves the tension by deciding that CLS is really asserting a hybrid speech/association right, and that a hybrid speech/association right need only pass the test for speech restrictions.
Harold Jeffreys, F.R.S., noted geologist and astronomer, and author of a well-regarded philosophy of science book Scientific Inference (1957), led off with a nice ad hominem: "Without using induction, Milne and Eddington could not order their lives for a day, and what they are really asserting is that they are entitled to use special axioms in physics, for which no need has been shown".
So one potential claim a whistleblower might make is that they're really asserting their First Amendment rights.
What they are really asserting when they say that is that they believe protecting blue-collar jobs isn't really all that desirable, because they believe Americans think blue-collar work isn't really a desirable ends - that if anything, Americans see factory, small-business and agriculture jobs as merely a means to a white-collar professional ends.
I have no idea if those commentaries are on the mark but I respectfully suggest that if the chief is really interested in asserting the court's independence, he should embrace the Code of Conduct and get his colleagues to adopt it.
In a city filled with big egos, he said, this was really about asserting who was the alpha dog.
However, the profile asserted: "What is really significant is not the opposition that Koch's academic efforts provoke.
If the case against John Walker Lindh, the "American Taliban," is really as weak as Ms. Kayyem asserts, then why did he suddenly plead guilty to reduced charges that could nevertheless bring him 20 years in prison?
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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