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It is because Germany has proved to be a paragon of its own virtues: thrift and hard work.
Obviously homemade, like the whole-meal bread, also a paragon of its kind, and the shellfish soup.
And yet we made a classic of the book, and a moral paragon of its author — a man whose deepest desire and signature act was to turn his back on the rest of us.
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The seven-passenger Hyundai Santa Fe may seem a paragon of smart packaging, but its cargo area offers one-third the capacity of the Odyssey's cavernous hold.
Shell is often held up as a paragon of virtue in its treatment of bribery.
Wall Street is getting edgy even about General Electric, that paragon of virtue, because its bookkeeping may lend itself to the artificial smoothing of earnings.
Three of those delusions held by citizens were that their own country was a paragon of peace, that its arms were only to defend the land, and that when it fought, it fought only for what was right.
Bolzano/Bozen, from the epicenter of the market, feels very much like a city that has fulfilled the aspirations of its bilingual signage, a paragon of the European Union and its ideal of supranational cooperation.
His daughter, its paragon of virtue, is a bit of an anaemic bore.
In calling him its paragon of Western manliness, Stetson says he is "confident, rugged, masculine".
First comes Alexander Waugh (1840-1906), known as the Brute, a surgeon and a paragon of Victorian masculinity in its most unappealing aspects.
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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