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Clinically, almost everybody tries to talk a woman out of a C-section because of its heightened risk and longer recovery time: it is also widely felt that only anxious women would choose it, and they should have their anxieties assuaged rather than their demands met.
IH: That cathedral stands out to me because of its heightened, painterly inventiveness.
Clear Channel has become acutely aware of its heightened profile in Washington.
Mr. Jurosko prefers operetta to mainstream musicals, because of its heightened sentimentality and more operatic-sounding music.
In New Jersey, which has suddenly found itself on a list of potential terrorism targets, police chiefs bemoaned the costs of its heightened security procedures.
While McQuivey says he has heard anecdotes of its heightened use, his firm estimates that some $325 million will be spent on the category this year, increasing to $429 million next year and over $1 billion by 2013.
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In the coda of her Act II solo she suddenly added a soft out-of-the-blue triple pirouette that had the audience gasping aloud not because of its virtuosity but because of its unexpected rightness: it heightened Odette's light.
"We are taking steps to make it more difficult for the government of Iran to satisfy its heightened demand for dollars — and making it clear to anyone who provides dollars to the government that they face sanctions," said David S. Cohen, the Treasury Department under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.
This new style of democratic consumerism, with its heightened emotions and exciting, visceral music, offered a third way for those caught between the polarisations of Fascism and Communism.
This historical case study sheds light on the dilemma with particular clarity because the Free Schools represent one of the United States' most radical experiments in constructivist learning, just as the Black Power movement promoted one of its most heightened efforts to challenge systemic oppression.
The breakup of its empire heightened Britain's sense of eclipse, and in the wake of World War II, a cultural retrenchment of sorts took place, with writers as disparate as Alan Sillitoe, John Wain, Margaret Drabble and Barbara Pym turning out small, gently ironic works that eschewed grand ambitions.
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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