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'Make me one of those iced, swirly, frothy frappuccino mocha things,' he says to a young woman dressed modishly in black.
In a beautifully written novel, "The General in his Labyrinth", Gabriel García Márquez, a Colombian writer, modishly portrayed Bolívar as a man of the people traduced by a reactionary oligarchy.
His silver-grey hair is modishly long, his collar unbuttoned.
The meeting rooms are whimsically known as "sandboxes", and a bell rings daily at 3pm to invite everyone to help themselves to a freshly baked cookie.Level39, as it is modishly known, is a startup "accelerator" whose members are mostly fintech companies.
All this may work for a bit, but thrifty German consumers will not be kept away from bargain telephony for ever, and heavy-handedness stokes public hostility to the company.Deutsche Telekom's second tactic is to reinvent itself as a Systemhaus, selling multimedia, electronic commerce and anything else floating modishly across the Atlantic.
AT THE turn of the millennium the most notable innovation emanating from the modishly gritty streets of east London was the Hoxton Fin, a hairstyle popularised by David Beckham.
THE White Paper on what is now modishly referred to as the "converged communications industries", published on December 12th, neatly reflects the tensions within New Labour.
Hamish Hamilton; £16.99THE hybrid literary form developed by W.G. Sebald, a German-born author who lives in England, is both ancient and modishly modern.
Neither party has a persuasive vision of which non-financial sectors will drive growth in future, though both talk modishly of green jobs and yearn nebulously for Britain to start making things again.
The label's USP has until now been subtly preppy basics and modishly folksy separates in a French exchange sort of vein, with a bit a of Gallic rock'*'roll thrown in for good measure.
So Kate is in good company, then, and has also styled her coat according to the latest fashion directive from the catwalks – that is, to modishly loop the end of one's belt through one's waistband to add a bit of determined but debonair insouciance.
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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