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Discover LudwigThe term "subject head" is not commonly used in written English.
Instead, the term "subject noun" or "subject phrase" may be more appropriate. A subject noun is the main noun or pronoun that performs the action in a sentence, while a subject phrase is a group of words acting as the subject of a sentence. Example: "The subject noun of this sentence is 'dog'." or "The subject phrase in this sentence is 'the cute dog with the fluffy tail'."
Exact(33)
David Willetts is one of the few current ministers to have addressed the subject head on.
Josephine La Bella, 25, who works at a payroll company, likes to tackle the delicate subject head on.
Later, they bravely tackled the subject head on, with their own account of the England-Germany game.
As Tasmania considers the legalisation of euthanasia, Mr Walsh tackles the subject head on.In this section Running the world Earmarked The red menace, reconsidered Philosophy as inspiration Coming together Something new ReprintsBut he is not always, or not only, provocative.
Sue Blackmore's article about Ben Libet's rather shallow examination of the nature of consciousness tackled the subject head on - Madeleine Bunting's apologia for gang murder had the absence of free will as a foundation stone, but didn't appear to realise.
The African-American president of the Academy, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, didn't tackle the subject head on in an interview with Associated Press, but asserted that the Academy was "committed to seeking out diversity of voice and opinion".
Similar(25)
But only rarely has theatre tackled the subject head-on.
It's going to take exposure of this film and reports in the UK to tackle this subject head-on".
Lerner can write a novel, set in the present, that deals with the subject head-on, but only by becoming essayistic, journalistic (the narrator is aggregating news stories in his head; he is neither evacuating a hospital nor being evacuated himself), and, even then, only amid the heaviest weather yet visited on New York City this century.
But the first time that one of the New Wave directors, Godard, took on a political subject head-on, with "Le Petit Soldat," in 1960, it was simultaneously considered an outrageous rightist provocation and banned by the government of Charles de Gaulle.
Sherman himself tackled the latter subject head-on during a press conference on Thursday, responding to a question about how it felt to be called a 'thug' by saying: The only reason it bothers me is because it seems like it's the accepted way of calling somebody the n-word nowadays.
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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