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I read line by line.
Being asked to read lines for the warm-up of a radio show led to him being invited to do the same sort of job on air for the Bing Crosby Kraft Music Hall.
Have you seen the Reading line-up for the past few years?
Just look at this year's Reading line-up, and you'll see plenty of bands a long way up the bill – Dry The River, Young Guns, Deaf Havana – whose music you'd normally expect to live and die in small-town alt pub battle of the bands competitions.
I now glanced at the other group, surly and melancholic, weighed down with armfuls of reading material, lining up at the pay phones.
You're not learning to read by lining up the letters in the word 'cat.' You're learning to read by understanding language, by listening.
A big doorstop of a Lincoln biography stares out, daring to be read, and lined up back to back to back are three hefty titles fit for a graduate student's reading list: "The Creation of the American Republic," by Gordon S. Wood; Louis Menand's "American Studies"; and "Dilemmas of Pluralistic Democracy," by the Yale political scientist Robert A. Dahl.
We couldn't help giggling when we read lines like, "She locked me up in the bathroom like a dog".
Just reading the line-up was daunting enough.
We caught up with him at a restaurant in Boston, Massachusetts, and while he read the menu, we read the line-up of topics for the Davos meeting in January 2000.
After the reading, fans lined up, somewhat aggressively, to have copies signed by the author.
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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