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Mr. Simon, 50, is so unknown that he joked about how USA Today, on its front page this morning, called him "Paul Simon Jr".
There, it is said, sailing ships will transport them to lavish prosperity across the ocean, where land is plentiful and fertile, and disease so unknown that "people would travel for a day just to watch a man sniff".
Mrs. Clinton now finds herself locked in a tight race with Rick A. Lazio, an opponent so unknown that most New Yorkers were unable to offer any opinion of him.
Candidates for State Supreme Court here are usually so unknown that contestants with familiar names have often won because, political scientists say, voters thought they were actually voting for someone they knew.
Last week, though, he and 400 other young people packed up their chain saws, left the forests and streams of Washington, Montana, Minnesota and Iowa — among other places — and drove straight across the country to New York City, a destination so unknown that they drilled themselves on the names of the five boroughs.
He was so unknown that no one could find a photo of him to run with the news story.
Similar(46)
One reason the preserves remain so unknown is that hiking is the chief pursuit.
But, she said, "You don't picture McCain surviving his whole term," and "with her being so unknown, to be that close to taking over?" Traditionally, running mates prove to have little if any impact on the election result.
So unknown was Mr. Smith that it would be tempting to refer to him as Malcolm X were that name not already taken.
"It was something that was just so unknown to us".
It was "the unknown" that scared me so much.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com