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I went back twice in 2000, and over time the sound of the language grew on me.
With Mr. Loughner, dozens of people apparently saw warning signs: the classmates who listened as his dogmatic language grew more detached from reality.
As he refined the character, his language grew vaguer and vaguer, an evolution that was actually an articulate comment on the decline of clarity in political rhetoric.
Mr Daley's odd dialogue with reporters (one calls him "the Jackson Pollock of the English language") grew strained as scandals felled allies but never reached the mayor himself.
The local language grew full of horrible expressions for birth defects: "jellyfish" (babies born without bones), "grapes" (spontaneously aborted clumps of tissue), "turtles," "octopuses," "apples," "devils".
I kept on listening to Mr Tambourine Man, Don't Think Twice and A Simple Twist of Fate, and my love of language grew.
Similar(42)
Yet when his language grows excessively figurative, it becomes hard to follow him.
Prism, Tempora, Upstream, Bullrun – as our language grows we begin to speak with greater clarity.
The novel's language grows more confident, and history itself becomes an animating force.
America has had the study of a foreign language grow before, only to see the bubble burst.
Even as the English language grows more dominant throughout the world, it is spawning offspring linguists call Englishes.
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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