Exact(1)
Mr. Meltzer counters the dark sarcasm of the isolated poet by having the piano almost, but never quite, echo the vocal line in spiraling unison octaves.
Similar(7)
At the start of the piece four dancers pose in varying tableaus, not quite echoing the images above them but suggesting that they too are part of this private, inchoate world.
Nancy!" not quite echoed by ones for "Harry Charles Rangelgedginging himself into the camera frame; all those pens was Obama using a different one for every letter of his name?
Not quite echoes of the January day precisely 20 years ago when 13,000 packed the Racecourse to the rafters to see the Football League's bottom side defeat the reigning champions Arsenal, but here was a night to add to Wrexham's rich tapestry of FA Cup occasions.
"That's quite right," echoed Brown, who has lost a very much current England batsman in Ian Bell for Saturday's contest because of a broken toe.
Haaretz's Aluf Benn argued that Israel would not be able to act in such a way again after this report, a comment quite widely echoed.
KEN AULETTA: Some of the soap opera critics are quite thoughtful, and echo concerns that one has often heard about the TV images being fed to our children.
There are 50 journalists, maybe more, in the Legislative Correspondents Association, a gaggle of highly competitive reporters who call Albany home and can make the statehouse quite a media echo chamber.
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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