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Walker recited, "The price of a stock is artificially raised when subjected to something other than ordinary market forces".
That sense of being subjected to something unavoidable and unpleasant has turned public cellphone conversations into a flash point.
As the reporter Carolyn Jones wrote about recently in the Texas Observer, we would have been subjected to something akin to emotional torture.
In 1993, he formally graduated from Spurs' youth team to the senior side – with whom, during a match against Sunderland, he was subjected to something much more brazen than a comment about cricket.
Although I was over the moon when I learned there was no longer any chance of being subjected to "something big enough to tear your ass in half" while eating my lunch, others disagree.
Meanwhile three faculty members had written the university administration, arguing that Mr. Leonard's project violated the university's research standards in that the students involved were being subjected to something harmful (the idea that there were scientific alternatives to the theory of evolution) without receiving any benefit.
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"To have passengers unnecessarily subjected to delay is something that just can't happen if we want to keep our riders".
But the actual footsoldiers like Maud were subject to something rougher: imprisonment, unemployment and poverty.
But you can be subject to something in theory but not so amenable in practice.
Labour was in agony this week, as it squirmed and tried to change the subject to something other than Europe.
Let's move the subject to something banal, like watching lots of women have sex with HUGH HEFNER.
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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