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More often hearing it.
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In Iran, you more often hear the Arabic sohbat.
Mr Benjamin makes a demographic projection of a kind more often heard on American lips than European ones.
Yet it is nobody's idea of a noble failure; words like fiasco are more often heard.
At first interpreted as an expression of ennui after too many parties, the song is now more often heard as a comment on the passing of time.
The wine director, Phil Pratt, has a practiced theatricality and patter more often heard above the splash of gin than the gentle swirl of old Bordeaux.
Points for style: American politicians should adopt "useless," more often heard here in reference to philandering husbands and remote controls, as a term of public contempt.
In the woods the other day — redwoods and coastal oaks — I stopped to listen to a Swainson's thrush, a bird more often heard than seen.
More often heard in the favelas of northeast Brazil (as in the shantytowns of South Africa) is the slightly more hopeful phrase: "Of course, nothing has changed yet".
The trio has become an unlikely musical phenomenon, resurrecting Irish parlor songs and adding luster to ballads more often heard in smoke-choked pubs.
So in this, the talkosphere, I hope we more often hear people say: "Fine, so you disagree - even despise each other - but now what?
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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