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Ghazala Khan, it appears, made sure of that.
All this, it appears, made the society of the British upper crust particularly appealing to Chanel.
"Ascroft, it appears, made the contacts to sell the haul on, while Price and others travelled the country to target hauliers to steal the vehicles and the consignments.
In fact, his passion for the nineteenth-century romantics, who accused scientists of making nature out to be far less wondrous than it appears, made up part of the central riposte for his 1998 book, Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder.
The Times article led with a literary allusion that might seem unlikely for a science reporter today: "Tennyson, it appears, made a mistake in calling tears 'idle.'" Then, in 1928, either by experiment or by accident (the historical record is unclear), Fleming found an antibiotic in a mold called penicillium notatum.
The new movie "Annihilation" feels like a vanity project in a very specific way: until a few strikingly inspired moments near the end, it plays like a film made for no personal need, no sense of inquiry or effort to understand situations, characters, or the universe — rather, it appears made to impress.
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She apparently did not participate in the effort begun in 1780 by Benjamin Franklin's daughter, Sarah Bache, to provide shirts for the army, but she did, it appears, make flags.
The mothers, it appears, make extra probes to share with the younger chimps and invest time in coaching them to become better.
Women, it appears, make men do all sorts of things they don't want to do.
Some were found with their heads plunged into the earth, which they had excavated; having thus, as it appeared, made pits for themselves, and having suffocated themselves".
And the Okinawans, it appears, have made it all a science that pays off.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com