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Jane strained to learn the difficult, guttural Moroccan dialect of Arabic, Derija, so that she might understand Cherifa better.
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It doesn't feel jarring, largely because Carousel's lyrics appear to be about the fleeting nature of euphoria: "We heard the sound creaking loud, a crooked frame circling us / We strain to learn just how it turns round".
The emergence of Black English is owed in part to straightforwardly linguistic factors: McWhorter convincingly cites the phenomenon of recently enslaved adults straining to learn a new language, plus a syncretistic importation of vocal gestures picked up along the trail of forced migration.
We strained to hear.
It was sparked by ongoing worries about experiments in which researchers modify H5N1 bird flu and other deadly avian strains to learn what mutations might help them to spread among humans.
The movie certainly draws us in as young Joey, the horse, strains to learn from Albert how to plow rocky Devon land, and then is sold to a British cavalry officer headed for battle.
Researchers Herman Dierick and Ralph Greenspan of The Neurosciences Institute in San Diego, California, set out to see if they could breed high levels of belligerence back into lab strains and to learn what genes might be implicated.
I strained to look.
He strained to listen.
If not, then you're trying to go that extra mile straining your body to learn martial arts poses.
In the case of an incorrect straining technique, RBT can be applied to learn to strain adequately.
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