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Patent trials are part bombast, part boredom.
It is titled "Two Acres," and after Cecil Valance's death in France, in 1916, it is quoted by Churchill in an obituary of the poet that appears in the Times, and is quickly taken up and anthologized as the great English war poem, part bombast and part elegy for a lost pastoral innocence.
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"Bombast and unity" said one reviewer.
"Bombast and unity," one reviewer said.
Minutes earlier, Ryan had traded bombast for realism.
But songs end in pretty keyboard codas rather than bombast.
Paul said polls became part of "a self-reinforcing news cycle because of the celebrity nature that goes on, on and on", though he accepted that voters might "at a superficial level be attracted to bombast, insults, junior high sort of lobbing of verbal bombs that kind of stuff".
"I believe I'm a champion," he says without bombast.
Less inspired was a campaign to build a monument and athletic stadium in honor of Nietzsche: the concept was a rare lapse of taste on Kessler's part, more Wilhelmine bombast than Dionysian frenzy.
Sexually sparring couples are spurred on by an original score, equal parts thrum and bombast, by Mr. Chatham, and Ms. Armitage's punk forays of decades past are evoked in the scrum and tangle of splayed crotches and aggressively skewed poses.
At the UFC 205 press conference Woodley watched McGregor eviscerate the rest of the card with torrents of profane insults screamed into the roar of an adoring crowd that sees such bombast as part of McGregor's Irish charm.
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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