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Couture has always mattered only to the people who follow its intricacies, and in a way its isolation gives it a perverse kind of freedom.
But opponents of the death penalty call it a perverse tradition.
However, Leeds have responded with amazement at today's decision, labelling it a "perverse outcome".
Is it a perverse sense of humor, like guffawing as someone fatally slips on a banana peel?
Annie needs to escape the gloomy seaside village that Mr. Hornby calls Gooleness — though he does give it a perverse rock 'n' roll cachet.
Regional autonomy brought with it a perverse form of peer-group pressure in which each government wanted to build whatever the neighbours had, says Antonio Muñoz Molina, a writer who used to be a municipal official in Granada.
This does not make sense, which is why the scientists call it a perverse psychological dynamic.
You call it a "perverse coincidence"... Gladwell: The role of parents in the development of children is a lot more complex than we may realize.
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It generally seemed as if it were a perverse kind of privilege to get the Beadle treatment.
His "Pas de Deux" was a duet with an umbrella, which kept rising and pulling him about as if it had a perverse will of its own.
"It is a perverse society that would punish that which it wishes to encourage," he says.
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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