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Suppose a mining firm pays $10m to a government for a licence to dig.
Many people were starting to balk at sky-high market valuations of companies whose only meaningful asset was a licence to dig holes in some obscure part of the world.
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The experts in copper mining were German, and Elizabeth secured the services of Daniel Hechstetter of Augsburg, to whom she granted a licence to "search, dig, try, roast and melt all manner of mines and ores of gold, silver, copper and quicksilver" in the Keswick area and elsewhere.
If, as seems likely, "3G" licence winners have to install these new high-speed networks promptly, they will have to dig deep.
So, be ready to dig out all those original installation discs or downloads for the programs, along with their licence numbers.
To dig or not to dig?
And, presumably, to dig.
Students at the Texas College of Mines were urged to "dig, dig, dig,….
You have to dig some.
Biklé began to dig.
They came to dig.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com