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The press secretary reached for the vice president's next sentence that there could be "complications you can't anticipate" and also dug out a speech Mr. Bush gave Oct. 7 in Cincinnati, where he said, "Military conflict could be difficult".
The emphasis on reviving the Middle East peace process while wooing potential regional allies such as Syria echoed Mr Blair's oft-stated view that "the road to Baghdad runs through Jerusalem .There was thus disappointment three weeks ago when Mr Bush swatted aside the ISG's work with a single dismissive sentence that there was no "magic formula" for success.
(A numerical sentence is a first-order sentence asserting the existence of some objects. For example, the numerical sentence that there exist at least two objects is: ∃x∃y(x ≠ y).) If van Inwagen is correct, it is indeterminate whether or not the relevant numerical sentence is true, in which case one of the constituent expressions—'∃', 'x', 'y', '~', '=' must be vague.
Diefenbaker responded, "My Lord, it was made clear by the elevation of my voice at the end of the sentence that there was a great big question mark on it".
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This is not a sentence that is there for you to copy into your outline so you can cheat and make a "simple" outline into a simple and lazy outline.
Thus, when the propositional function "Tx in which T stands for the predicate "…is a tiger" and x is a variable replaceable with a name is written beside a symbol known as the existential quantifier ∃x, meaning "There exists at least one x such that…"—the result is a sentence that means "There exists at least one x such that x is a tiger".
Judge Rakoff, who presided over the month long trial, wrote in his sentencing order that "there is no doubt that Gupta, though not immediately profiting from tipping Rajaratnam, viewed it as an avenue to future benefits, opportunities, and even excitement".
Take a walk along the tree-lined avenues and there's only one sentence that comes to mind: there will be no civil war in Greece.
(If you ever read a sentence that starts with "Neocons believe," there is a 99.44 percent chance everything else in that sentence will be untrue).
How can a countable model satisfy the first-order sentence which "says that" there are uncountably many things?
Rather his stories invite second readings that – the mark of really good work – seem to uncover sentences that weren't there the first time around.
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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