Suggestions(1)
Exact(3)
But it rushed to outlaw snoods (neck-warmers) on the field: Mr Blatter feared that a player might be strangled.
He said the project had been configured to exclude "anyone who is conceivably involved in a crime — a gunshot or stab wound, someone who might be strangled, you wouldn't touch".
The Institute for the German Economy, the research arm of the country's business associations, hopes so, if only because the economy might be strangled to death unless red tape is loosened.Germans are fed up with forms and rules.
Similar(55)
The chief I.E.A. economist, Fatih Birol, warned that high oil prices "might be strangling the economic recovery".
The woman, whose name was not immediately released, had marks around her neck that indicated she might have been strangled, the police said.
The man, Michael Sokolov, had no gunshot or stab wounds, but there were signs that he might have been strangled and beaten, the police said.
South African police say Mr Karegeya, 53, might have been strangled.
"There is a possibility that he might have been strangled".
Or what about the major recent faux pas on Fox's behalf where they just so happened to have their movie poster feature Jennifer Lawrence's Mystique (a character who is more often than not represented sans- clothing, might I add) being strangled by Apocalypse?
She could be strangling that baby.
Sure, the church woke me up, but someday it might wake me up from a nightmare of being strangled by a rainbow.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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