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The phrase "something better from" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to express a desire for an improved outcome or alternative, but it lacks clarity without additional context. Example: "I hope to find something better from this experience."
Exact(8)
My neighbour, while recognising he may get something better from a specialist retailer, may judge that it will not be so reliably better (for my parents' generation, supermarkets were liberators from the risks of mouldy cheddar and maggoty apples) as to justify the extra cost and time.
But is it too demanding to expect something better from science?
They had a right to expect something better from the second, liberated half of their lives.
Mr Beck declared yesterday that the event showed there was a yearning for something better from politics.
For those who want something better from their action film, you'll need to check a movie theater in some other universe.
The bees, so essential to our agriculture and indeed to our landscape as we know it, deserve something better from us than the senseless destruction of their habitat.
Similar(52)
But, as Jamison discovers, it provides something better: "relief from my own plotline".
We should simply be glad when something better is built from this weak and warped material, as has happened this week.
"My ambition and an appetite to do something better has come from that, but I also grew up with this big, silent terror of whatever this 'difficult' life was".
This "hope" for our economy is in the entrepreneurs who start small businesses — the innovators and dreamers who believe that against all odds they can build something better — create something from nothing, and drive change in the world.
Although as a whole, society doesn't necessarily applaud failure, we at least accept it for certain things -- careers, schooling, scientific research and medicine -- having faith that something better will result from the next try, or maybe even the next one after that.
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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