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The end of this piece might invoke elephants rampaging through a forest.
We might invoke the spirit of a bird to function as anairborne guide.
It was intended that, against such attempted enforcement, he might invoke, if desired, and obtain, the shield of absolute silence.
Their impatience can extend beyond arguably esoteric literary references to the period details an author might invoke.
The Bush administration has already suggested that it might invoke severe economic penalties if this round failed to produce results.
Chabon had written the line, he said, imagining that it might invoke cumin, coriander, or cloves, along with a more familiar scent from the reader's school days.
After Syrian forces sent shells across the Turkish border last week, the Turkish government hinted that it might invoke NATO's Article 5 on mutual protection.
There is value in distinguishing what is right from what is legal in order to avoid creating precedents that subsequent presidents might invoke in less exigent circumstances.
White rabble-rousers might invoke "reverse discrimination" to motivate racist voters, but to conservative intellectuals affirmative action simply violates the plain meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.
But, out of bemused curiosity, I tuned in for the apology tour, anticipating that Maher might invoke, as politicians in his situation invariably do, "the real racists".
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On December 17, Lewis informed Paulson and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke that, surprised by the magnitude of Merrill's losses, he might invoke a MAC.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com