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Discover LudwigThe phrase "seek for a" is not correct in written English.
The correct phrase would be "seek a" or "seeking for a". Example: I am seeking a new job opportunity. Example: She is seeking for a way to improve her grades.
Exact(60)
But he did not seek for a second to put this down to outside influences or extraneous matters.
One story in particular, "the tale of a man who was compelled to seek for a pure virgin" (The Sheikh's Virgin Bride), gave young Sam night terrors.
The land is near Jordan, in an area where Israel already has many illegal settlement farms built on land Palestinians seek for a state.
To seek for a rival equally deserving of the veneration of the nursery we must go back to the unknown genius that produced "Puss in Boots".
Israel could come under scrutiny for its actions in the current Gaza war as well as decades of settlement building on war-won lands the Palestinians seek for a state.
On the other hand, a requirement, which the detainees seek, for a more robust appellate review could strengthen the government's hand in arguing that there is no need for habeas corpus after all.
By Lillian Ross and Brendan Gill The New Yorker, September 7, 1946 P. 21 Talk: Interview with Billy Rose, who has signed up with the Bell Syndicate to write five columns a seek for a year, beginning Jan . 1st
"I don't seek for a style, either ancient or modern," he wrote in a revealing, if clumsy, essay, The Kind of Architecture We Want in Britain, published in 1957.
We shall seek for a contradiction.
Thus, we seek for a linear order reduction transformation [22]: (36).
We need to seek for a solution for the equation (23).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com