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Mr. Hurt played contrary-motion phrases between left-hand chords and right-hand notes, and there was a hard, percussive bounce in his playing.
Mr. Costello handled his songs with an intimate vibrato; Ms. Harry sounded worldly and resilient, even as she spoke-sang phrases between the pointillistic dissonances of "Cups".
Mahler's last completed symphony, performed by the Vienna Philharmonic, sounded earthy and rampant with its restless gallops and fugues and burlesques, snatches of melody made whole as each soloist – including the VPO's stunning viola leader – passed the phrases between them.
When traveling internationally, Krista Canfield, a senior manager for LinkedIn's corporate communications, relies on Google Translate, a Web site and free app that translates words and phrases between more than 60 languages.
Exchanges of melodic phrases between two or more parts in turn led to canon, a form in which all voice parts are derived from one tune either by strict imitation of the basic melody or by manipulations stipulated in often quite sophisticated verbal instructions (canon = law).
A few stylistic points now and then seem not quite right, to be sure: the accentuations of torso tiltings, the spacings between dancers, the length of certain balances, and, more markedly, an evening-out of Cunningham's frequent contrast in pacing phrases between straight-legged steps on half-toe and steps with bent knees and heels down.
Similar(50)
The aim of RE in the biomedical domain is the extraction of relations not between phrases but between biological entities such as miRNA/gene, enzyme/metabolite or gene/disease.
She droned on the straightaways and slipped with practiced ease into the creek-like tumbles of the folk idiom between phrases.
That little phrase between the dashes — "or against the people you hire" — ignited a political explosion.
We are caught, in the psychologist Daniel Kahneman's phrase, between thinking fast and slow.
Using this metric, "protect American industry" was the most frequently used Republican phrase between 1893 and 1895; "men, women, and children" was the most frequently used Democratic phrase between 1929 and 1933.
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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