Exact(4)
It's a breathless muddle from there.
There is muddle from both sides on abortion after prenatal diagnosis.
It was a muddle from day one: London-listed Reed Elsevier Plc owns 50% of the operating company, Reed Elsevier Group, and 5.8% of the separately Amsterdam-listed Reed Elsevier NV, which in turn also owns the other 50% of the operating company.
At the other end, Italian Emanuele Giaccherini, on his first start for manager Guy Poyet, got his feet in a muddle from eight yards when he would have had a clear shot on goal before USA striker Altidore fired wide with a low drive from 20 yards.
Similar(56)
His mind was muddled from having learned five different systems in the last seven years, under seven different offensive coordinators.
Had Mr Miliband concentrated his fire on a long list of muddles from the proposed sale of our national forests to the BAE and energy policy muddles of recent days it would have been far worse".
The exhibition's ambitions were muddled from the start.
He cringed from the election muddle, recoiled from the abortion miasma, suffered through the stem cell debate.
But at least after the elections it seems more like a democracy and less like a country suffering a post-Soviet muddle struggling from one crisis to another.
Overheating Sócrates's poison Cable ties Coalition troubles Supreme muddle ReprintsCompetition from the two Russian-built plants undermines the case for a planned new nuclear-power plant at Visaginas.
Day to day details, obligations, petty challenges and hurdles drag at you as you muddle through from morning 'til night, only to get up the next day and start over.
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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