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But one day she is fostered – not by any ordinary couple but by Bella Yaga, a wicked witch, and her devilish companion, Mandrake.
An ex-boyfriend provides plodding speeches about the nightmare she is fostering, to which she responds by pursuing him through online networks as he seeks to escape to some last, non-mediated corner of wilderness.
noun. 1 a homeless and helpless person, esp. a neglected or abandoned child: she is foster-mother to various waifs and strays.
Archie, she told them, is one of two dogs she's fostering.
The product of an affair between a music critic and an actor, she was fostered by a wealthy family, who encouraged her musical talent.
Her mother died of cancer when Burke was 18 months old and for a few years she was fostered with family friends in Islington where she grew up, before returning to her hard-drinking dad and her two brothers.
It's clear Cormier's pride lies not in the profits she makes off events, or the adults who're impressed by her achievements, but in the community she's fostered with each show.
Rather than the public illusion, she gets a private illusion to take its place (which, she says, is fostered by the closed-in social world of Mob families associating only with each other).
Reno is a mover, an entertainer, and so is Foster; she knows exactly when to fling her long limbs about and when to stand perfectly still.
The first is foster.
She should ensure that writing is fostered in the early grades and evolved yearly, so that students can eventually handle the rigors of academic college writing.
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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