Exact(7)
I am perpetually wary about placing scientists on pedestals.
In Mr. Bitton's "Just Air (No Hands)," he and Lili Ladin seemed perpetually wary of each other.
Back home, he dresses formally, putting on his threadbare suit and tie, as if to do his reformed best; but he has a perpetually wary expression and a studied politesse that suggest an existential exile.
The slow erosion of the neighborhood was disheartening, and they were perpetually wary of the endless stream of cars heading for the Holland Tunnel a few steps from their door.
Through Craigslist she found a veteran California growing expert whose long involvement in marijuana cultivation during the years when it was completely illegal had left him perpetually wary, prompting a strange series of initial e-mails in which he referred only to his expertise in growing goji berries.
If we had to visualise this establishment, it would resemble an Edwardian board of aesthetic censors presided over by a stern TS Eliot type figure inherently hostile to innovation (the irony, of course, is that Eliot was the greatest revolutionary in modern poetry) and keeping a perpetually wary eye on the likes of a Terry Eagleton or a James Kelman.
Similar(53)
Schaap is perpetually weary.
Living so closely together, perpetually intent on each other, each was wary of disturbing the other's balance, so precariously achieved, of anger and resignation, revolt and submission.
Balanchine was notably wary of the star system, which emphasized who was dancing more than what was being danced, but he was perpetually fascinated by the connections among dancers, music and light.
Perpetually inebriated.
Perpetually unimpressed.
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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