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That will teach me not to read the clues.
With so much on the line, he wanted to read the clues carefully and think them through.
One has to read the clues of what seems to be lost, in art, artefacts, intuitions, dreams.
"Life is nothing if not predictable, if you read the clues and know how to put them together," Jen says in a monologue toward the play's end.
To me, it seemed he was saying, 'I wish it could be Christmas every day.' If you read the clues in the novel, it happens over the course of one year - from one winter to the next.
I also noticed that when Watson was faced with very short clues — ones with only a word or two — it often seemed to lose the race to the buzzer, possibly because the host read the clues so quickly that Watson didn't have enough time to do its full calculations.
Similar(50)
So for the clue at 26 Across, for example, I read the clue as "Ion".
Hands up if you read the clue at 65 Across ("'S.N.L.' segment") and immediately thought SKETCH.
My brain first went to a possibly silver tongue when I read the clue "Singer's tongue" but that's not the answer.
CRACK UNDER PRESSURE sprang into my head as soon as I read the clue, making me feel like a boss and theoretically assuring me a smooth solve.
Let me rephrase that; I knew the word, but it didn't pop into my head when I read the clue "Earthworm or leech, e.g".
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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