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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'masters at work' is correct and usable in written English.
It is usually used to describe someone who is very proficient and highly skilled at their job. For example, "The chefs in this kitchen are true masters at work."
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MASTERS AT WORK May 3 at 11 p.m.; Le Bain at the Standard Hotel, 444 West 13th Street, West Village.
Veterans like Danny Tenaglia and Masters at Work attracted huge crowds.
What could anyone do but watch and admire the masters at work?
You will be able to get involved in activities as well as watch the masters at work.
You can hear David Morales's old remixes in their sound, the stuff Masters at Work were doing in the 1990s.
"Masters at Work" also includes two Balanchine gems: the lush, entrancing "Serenade" and the stringently witty "Stravinsky Violin Concerto".
One of the most satisfying programs should be "Balanchine and Robbins: Masters at Work" (Friday, Saturday night and Sunday), featuring George Balanchine's "Western Symphony" and Jerome Robbins's "N.Y.
Despite that, its enormous conical construction contains the world's only amphitheatre "hotshop", where up to 150 people at a time can watch glass masters at work.
Dancefusion has choreographed the story of Masters at Work's most ambitious project, "Nuyorican Soul".
That's because they were too busy apeing the American underground house artists like Masters at Work to bother with British trends.
Similar(1)
Despite their demure, besuited personae, the Beatles were past masters at working the crowd into a frenzy.
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