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Again, we lament the change without having much clue about its causes.
His younger brother Cyrus confirms: "None of us in the family had much clue as to him becoming a writer.
"There wasn't really much clue about how you would make a living if you didn't want to join those two industries.
Unfortunately, the book does not really go deeper than that, and does not offer much clue to where, politically, Iran is now headed.
Only in fast left-right slaloms does the X6 M give much clue to how much mass it's shifting around.
A study by the French Banking Federation concluded that the long-term level of GDP would be 6% lower in the euro area.In fact, the bankers, like everyone else, have not had much clue what effect tighter rules would have.
About 800 balanced, tip-toed, peered and strained to see Navratilova play simple, near-perfect, serve-volley, chip-and-charge grass-court tennis against an opponent without much clue about playing on the stuff.
Until 1978, when the Kirov's full-length production of "La Bayadère" was first shown on Western television, few people had much clue what this 1877 story ballet, set in India, was like.
If it weren't for the changes of costume and the occasional voice-over waffling on (about black swans, red firebirds, light and nothingness), nobody would have had much clue what was going on, and yet this was the program's most substantial item.
Revealingly, Stephen Sondheim's least successful musical has had productions and cast recordings under four different designations – Bounce, Gold!, Wise Guys and, finally, Road Show – although none of these variations gives the uninitiated much clue to the content, which dramatises the early 20th century American entrepreneurs, Addison and Wilson Mizner.
He tells both sides of the story, too; looking not only at the persecution of gay people, but drawing on the lives and works of figures like Somerset Maugham, Oscar Wilde, Susan Sontag and James Baldwin, in order to figure out why gay people travelled so much (clue: it was usually to flee their oppressors) and why gay networks formed (mostly for sex and solidarity).
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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