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Get wind of.
If you get wind of something, you hear or learn about it, especially if it was meant to be secret.
Exact(1)
The global public need only get wind of negligence and "human error" somewhere in the world and suddenly the governments advocating "green" nuclear energy will find themselves accused of gambling recklessly and against their better judgment with the security interests of the population.
Similar(59)
"If liberal or feminist commentators only get wound up about the things that fit their agendas, then conveniently ignore inconvenient truths that don't, why should the rest of us care about what bothers them?" he wrote in The Telegraph.
Rackham only got wind of the explanation later.
It's entirely possible that those conversations started in January, or even earlier, and Bloomberg only got wind of it towards the tail-end of the situation.
"She'd just get wound up".
But getting wound up about it only feeds the fire, babe.
Judge Barker was just getting wound up.
Jefferies' Lipton points out that in the short term Obama's policy will only serve to get wind and solar development back on pace with recent years, when yearly growth exceeded 30%.
Some opponents of biotechnology are only now getting wind that the sugar beets have been resurrected.
Did Peta get wind?
And will Owen get wind of this?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com