Exact(2)
It might precisely be the changes that appear in the body, for example in the brain, which are responsible for cognition.
Which means that the more accurate question – and this might precisely be why it plagues Britain so – is: What kind of leaders are we choosing?
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The performances there -- judged from a "Richard III" this summer with Kathryn Hunter in the title role -- may not embody every single speculation as to what performances at the Globe or the Rose might precisely have been like.
We're hearing a lot about the new U.S. Census these days and many might wonder what, precisely, is at stake.
We have included only the clinical benefits to the patient (not prevention of HIV transmission and other outcomes), so the results might not be precisely comparable.
And here's where you might precisely run into a problem.
Given the complexity of the inflammatory response, identifying a single marker that might precisely facilitate diagnosis and risk assessment is unrealistic.
The figure is impossible to determine precisely: it might be more like 800,000; it might be more in the range of 1,200,000.
Eye-popping live interactive special as viewers send in tweets and explicit Photoshopped images outlining precisely what might be happening in the happy couple's bedroom at that precise moment.
Men might, in fact, be precisely the thing they are trying to survive.
"I have no way of knowing whether there is a way of putting people off William Blake's classic tune, but if there is I suspect driving round and round Parliament Square with a van blaring it out might be precisely the way to achieve that," said Perkins.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com