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Going into the draft, Tunsil's suspension was cited as a potential "character issue"—a phrase that rolls off analysts' tongues with the same ease as forty-yard-dash times.
Robinson confirmed that Miliband had said he wanted to "weaponise" the NHS as an election issue, a phrase that came up in a meeting with BBC executives.
He remarked on being continuously reminded of the need to "tackle the Roma issue," a phrase he believes is inappropriate in the context of minority rights, because it places the party concerned in an inferior position to begin with.
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Each candidate spoke over the other, demanding that the other "talk about the issues" (a phrase that, together, they used eight times in a nanosecond).
At issue is a phrase in the law that says EPA can set rules to encourage "the best system of emission reduction".
Bill Burton, a spokesman for Mr. Obama, described the ad as "patently misleading," and campaign officials issued a phrase-by-phrase rebuttal.
Jay Carney, White House spokesman, Tuesday The issue A curious phrase by a President who is careful with his words.
He would harden his tone slightly at the start of his next chorus, issue an annunciatory phrase, repeat it, insert a defiant tremolo...
He would harden his tone slightly at the start of his next chorus, issue an annunciatory phrase, repeat it, insert a defiant tremolo.... His tone would grow hard, he would growl and crowd his notes, he would shake his phrases as if he had them clamped in his teeth..
He would harden his tone slightly at the start of his next chorus, issue an annunciatory phrase, repeat it, insert a defiant tremolo.... His tone would grow hard, he would growl and crowd his notes, he would shake his phrases as if he had them clamped in his teeth...
Perhaps recast the sentence: "Unlike a legal proceeding, the Freeh inquiry did not involve sworn testimony, and …" (Trying to skirt this issue by using a phrase like "unlike in a legal proceeding" is no better, since "unlike" is a preposition and should be followed by a noun or pronoun, not another preposition).
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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