Exact(1)
The way you wore your hair signified much about your status, identity and even mental wellness.
Similar(59)
It's early, so the statistics may not signify much.
It all smacks of student-grade stuff: full of portent, without signifying much.
Few people get dementia that young, and her sporadic memory lapses don't necessarily signify much.
He's done it forever, signifying, much as a cat does by purring, that you may approach.
His technique overwhelms the possibility of meaning: his lyrics, dark outsider-weirdo poetry, don't signify much.
The other three were labeled "extra virgin," a standard that in theory signifies an unrefined oil of good quality but in practice doesn't signify much at all.
During the depths of the Depression, strings of big percentage moves -- from very low prices -- came frequently and did not signify much in terms of future action.
As far as I can see, it wouldn't signify much beyond what we already know: the electoral map favors the G.O.P. this year, and President Obama is unpopular, particularly in the South.
None of this seemed to signify much — the piece was basically an update of the "acrobatic adagios" that bespangled couples used to do on music-hall programs — but it was impressive-looking.
Its French linguistic equivalent, jongleur, signifies much more than just juggling, though some of the jongleurs may have turned to juggling when their original role fell out of fashion.
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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