Exact(1)
Like the coveted yellow jersey that takes a feat to obtain, the yellow band can seem just as difficult.
Similar(57)
It doesn't take a feat of imagination to see how life affirming the support planning process can be: it is not simply a means to an end.
It took a feat of detective work to bring them together at last.
Weddings take a feat of strength.
If you do take a feat that doesn't work well ask the DM if you can swap it for another feat when you level up.
The break is a distraction even for the committed reader: it takes a Knausgaardian feat of memory to remember that the first volume was also cleaved in two.
And it takes a remarkable feat of ingratiating contortion to consider Gordon Brown's first leader's speech as setting "a new tone" and offering "the possibility of a different kind of Labour government", as Jon Cruddas and others have claimed.
We're a tiny operation and very short on space, so it takes quite a feat to fit people in.
It is part of the myth of any Cameron movie that it should take a Herculean feat of endurance to be made.
Television replays show Kasprowicz is right, just – although it would have taken a superhuman feat of umpiring from Billy Bowden to have spotted it and given him not out.
But it would take a heroic feat of social engineering to get us all to care about strangers exactly as much as we care about ourselves and those close to us.
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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