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Discover LudwigThe phrase "mysterious that" is not correct or usable in written English
Instead, you could use the phrase "mysteriously that" as a subordinating conjunction to connect two related clauses. For example: "The fog rolled in mysteriously that night, obscuring the landscape until morning."
Exact(55)
In any case, if magical ersatzism, in all its varieties, is objectionably mysterious, that suggests ersatzism is in trouble, and hence if we want the benefits of possible worlds, we have to pay for them by accepting concrete possible worlds.
The opening scenes of "Smithsoniansmith" are so strikingly mysterious that they prompt a certain excitement.
What if it's so mysterious that it gets lost in the peak content shuffle?
Quite often, the characters are so mysterious that it is hard to tell.
"It is so mysterious that doctors are unaware of its existence, he wrote.
So it seems mysterious that no one is cultivating it in the Southeast, where it could prosper.
The current Taylor season at New York City Center ends on Sunday; it has offered a number of pieces so mysterious that I long for further disclosures.
When he started writing for SmartMoney, the idea was that hedge funds were so mysterious that only an insider's voice would have real authority.
Mathematicians find it deeply mysterious that a chain of discrete rational numbers can connect so easily to geometry, to the smooth and continuous circle.
It's mysterious that anyone could use performers like Mr. Fairchild, Mr. Ulbricht, Tyler Angle (as Siegel's friend George Raft) and Jenifer Ringer, and not exploit their dancing.
Similar(1)
When you think about Michael Jackson and Prince, back in the day when they were mysterious... that mystery was attractive and now it's hard to have that.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com