Suggestions(1)
Idiom
In the face of.
If people act in the face of something, they do it despite it or when threatened by it.
Exact(1)
The Fitzgerald cult has survived in the face of all these changes, proving to be hardier than Fitzgerald himself.
Similar(57)
The question of how conservative politics could survive in the face of a resurgent Labor party was again raised.
The idea may not survive in the face of experiments, or even close scrutiny from other geneticists.
After 23 years of brutal Indonesian rule, the East Timorese have had plenty of experience of surviving in the face of tyranny.
Written for seven actors, For Colored Girls is a group of 20 poems on the power of black women to survive in the face of despair and pain.
As for rival e-commerce sites, some found themselves struggling to survive in the face of Amazon's ferocious price-cutting.
This was apt for the movie's story of a Turkish man struggling to survive in the face of harsh economics and the local mafia.
D&Q, which was founded by Chris Oliveros in 1990, at first struggled to survive in the face of the widespread perception that comics were mostly about superheroes.
Yet for Fleming, a loss of independence may have been inevitable if it is to ultimately survive in the face of aggressive global expansions by American firms.
Others questioned a crackdown on people who are trying to survive in the face of austerity policies which have increased poverty and therefore prostitution.
It means that a unique culture, in art and music and theater and writing, can survive in this country, survive in the face of a powerful culture pouring over our border every day".
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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