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Mr. Lehman told The Los Angeles Times in 2001, "I was on the prowl for gossip, so that I could feed the columnists so that they would let me live for another day". That world -- of backs scratched, logs rolled and favors rigorously tabulated -- formed the backdrop for Mr. Lehman's novella "Tell Me About It Tomorrow," published in Cosmopolitan in 1950.
To this end, a high-gain observer is first presented, for which the convergence property is rigorously established, forming the basis of the residual design.
Both Art Nouveau, which emerged in Europe in the late 19th century and is characterized by flowing lines and elements mimicking natural forms, and Art Deco, which peaked between the world wars and favored more rigorously geometric forms, were dedicated to the ideal of the ensemble.
One looks for either more rigorously clear form or more visionary mystery (Johnson).
In the Baroque era the melodic basso ostinato became incorporated into more rigorously structured forms of continuous variation, such as the chaconne and passacaglia.
The idea that each natural number tallies its predecessors in the series of natural numbers was fully formed in the Grundlagen, at §82, and rigorously executed in Volume I of the Grundgesetze, at §§114 119.
One of a cornucopia of street-corner tight-harmony groups formed by young black men in midcentury Harlem, the Cadillacs were among the first to incorporate rigorously choreographed dance moves into their performances.
Modern social and economic differentiation "implies a need for a differentiated system of public instruction to meet the needs of all social classes, [wherein] the attempt to form all citizens in a rigorously identical mold would be utterly inappropriate.
"Shooting a picture is recognizing an event," he later explained, "and at the very instant and within a fraction of a second rigorously organizing the forms you see to express and give meaning to that event.
Thus, the consent forms, rigorously developed at 23 leading medical institutions in concert with their institutional review boards, did not list an increased risk of death among participation risks.
Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1857) is as rigorously classicist in form as the 17th-century plays of Racine and Corneille, which were the high point of the French classical theatre, although Flaubert obeys laws more complex than those of the Aristotelians.
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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