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"It could produce something else," he said.
That's because as temperatures rise, the food-providing algae start to produce something else: toxic chemicals similar to hydrogen peroxide.
Once the commitment is made to generate a particular organ, such as a lung or limb, the cells no longer can be made to produce something else: they become committed to their fate.
Businesses buy inputs that are used to produce something else.
Penn, the beneficiary of shock tactics first time round, will then be asked to produce something else.
Similar(55)
The author, it complained, had contracted for a novel and produced something else.
It was as if the dessert chefs had given up on dessert, too, and produced something else in its place.
The project — five months for the design process and six for construction — also produced something else for the house: a new name, Sky Court.
Often, although not always, it reflects a confusion between demand and supply — saying that there was excess spending on, say, housing doesn't mean that the economy couldn't have been producing something else instead.
By contrast, a loss implies that resources are being used in a way that is less valuable than their use in producing something else.
The first two claims represent freedom of expression as instrumentally valuable; it is valuable, not in itself, but as the most reliable means of producing something else that Mill assumes is valuable (either extrinsically or intrinsically), namely, true belief.
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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