Exact(12)
I found backwaters no one had navigated for years.
Carpet fibres can be traced back to a specific house or clothes fibres can be recovered from obstacles navigated for a getaway, like walls and fences.
Up and down on these rough American seas we've navigated for so many decades; we've had our bad trips, too — unavoidable absurdities, dirty weather, but that doesn't count, really.
Painstakingly navigated for the first time over a three-year span at the beginning of the last century by Roald Amundsen, today — 110 years later — it is regularly crossed by commercial vessels and even cruise ships.
With ample fanfare and inevitable hitches, Roman officials on Sunday inaugurated water taxi service along the Tiber, which had not really been navigated for more than a century, the officials said.
"The whole thing sort of opens doors in the nonprofit world," Ms. Sowell said later, "and the whole world of social issues in New York, in a way that I'm not sure I could have navigated for myself".
Similar(47)
Tutus can also be difficult to navigate for men.
Subways and buses are efficient, though not always easy to navigate for non-Russian speakers.
This is an almost impossible area to navigate for a regulator.
Its somewhat clunky iPhone app is still worth navigating for the quality of writers it unearths.
She admits to being fazed by the office telephones, which she finds complex to navigate for conference calls.
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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