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Allegedly, you even publicly used a crude term, one which decorum and the FCC prohibit us from even saying on the air, to describe your own wife.
A couple of weeks ago, Barber was the brave Buc who publicly used the word complacency during the team's win-lose, win-lose pattern.
"So far as I know," Nash says, "this was the very first time Hoover publicly used the word depression to describe the current economic situation".
In 1980, in the midst of the transit strike, he publicly used the word "gridlock" for the first time, thus coining one of the great modern neologisms.
The president has publicly used that term twice in the last two months to describe a situation where India and neighboring Pakistan have nuclear weapons and are also at the edge of a conflict in Kashmir.
I even noticed at the Cairo Arab summit you publicly used the word "Israel," which your father never liked to do, and you referred directly to Prime Minister Ehud Barak.
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Fagan is believed to be the first juror to speak publicly using his name.
He also described the episode as a "huge contretemps," and I seriously doubt that anybody who publicly uses the word "contretemps" can ever be elected president.
However, the administration did not publicly use the word genocide until May 25 and even then diluted its impact by saying "acts of genocide".
It has already empowered and liberated many NHS staff, encouraging them to speak out publicly, using Twitter and other social media to express themselves.
Mr. Ratner, who quit as Oscars producer after publicly using a gay slur, should've been producing the Grammys, Mr. Rogen offered.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com