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Beetroot is a bit of a trouble maker.
The American military no longer considers Tikrit, Mr. Hussein's hometown, much of a trouble spot.
Mr. Kline attached a draft of a "Trouble With the Curve" script that he said Mr. Brown had optioned to the Bubble Factory, a Hollywood production company, for an initial payment of $2,500 in 1998.
The rest are massive brick carcasses, gutted and blackened, courtyards overrun with rust and weeds, ideal for squatting: migrants lived in them until the town council drove them out last year, packing them into the Jungle, where it was believed they would be less of a trouble to the locals.
During the flights, the UAV was always in radio contact in order to monitor its condition and to secure a return command in case of a trouble or an emergency.
This is fortunately, not too much of a trouble, and we are able to remedy it by interpolating instead between the two endpoints A and B of the line segment in Stein's oscillatory integral theorem.
Similar(47)
Tourists who travel in groups are virtually assured of a trouble-free trip.
A law professor explores "the strange career of a trouble-some word".
Tara Bray Smith, whose "West of Then" describes growing up in Hawaii with a drug-addicted mother, has her own version of a trouble-in-paradise story.
Mr. Téllez has titled the piece after Jean-Luc Godard's film "Alphaville," which offers a dystopian vision of a trouble-free but rigidly conformist future world.
When the Patriots sent a fourth-round draft pick to Tampa Bay for Talib, it seemed a high price to pay for a short-term rental of a trouble-prone talent.
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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