Exact(9)
Williams would not concede and wreaked considerably less havoc on the Indians than in previous years.
I even got a shorter haircut so my bike helmet would cause less havoc.
But the weakened storm that swept ashore on Mexico's gulf coast on Wednesday wreaked far less havoc than many anticipated it would.
There might be slightly less havoc if a spokesman for a black-supremacy movement made as much political headway among Negroes as Wallace evidently has among whites, but there would be havoc enough.
Still, the storm has caused less havoc than one in November 2000, when two feet of snow fell on a Monday afternoon, stranding thousands of people at school or at work, or on the way home, Mr. Niziol said.
Somehow, though, the lesson Task has taken away is that gloomy forecasts are "fear tactics," and that what we should have learned from our experience with Lehman and the bank bailout is that letting companies go under will wreak less havoc than we think.
Similar(50)
In a recent less-popular natural havoc caused by rains in peninsular India, the twitter hashtag #chennairains was instrumental in communicating status and accurate met predictions to locals, which was useful in relief efforts.
But something powerful enough to destroy hardy anthrax spores plays havoc with less hardy objects.
Here's hoping that the rest of the brain trust behind "30 Minutes or Less" will be wreaking havoc elsewhere.
By 2002, the band had lost bassist Stuart David (amicably) and Campbell (less so) and wreaked havoc on Murdoch's health.
This kind of "modular" change is far less likely to wreak havoc on an organism and so is much more likely to be used by evolution.
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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