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When he takes in something new — a visitor, a thought, a passing car in the distance — his eyes narrow, as if in hard light, and his lower jaw protrudes a bit.
When he takes in something new a visitor, a thought, a passing car in the distance his eyes narrow, as if in hard light, and his lower jaw protrudes a bit.
When she's back home in San Francisco, she takes in something that might seem easy to miss: the city's pace.
Similar(57)
A newcomer, however, can only take in something far from simple: contrasting layers of being.
Cultural and arts events are scarce, and to take in something in St . Louisis a 160-mile round trip.
And a few seconds would be too short, not enough time to take in something you were paying attention to.
To me science is a way to take in something beyond oneself, something with its own rules of order, chaos and beauty.
"I had the notion that it should be a book, a part-work that took in something more than my cancer goings-on," she says.
We all like the sensation that we're taking in something useful, or at least informative, but fiction's news is ultimately about interiors, not exteriors.
"Kinky was taking in something like six thousand dollars a week, and he still couldn't afford a place to live," Mike McGovern, a former columnist for the News, told me.
The most unconscious form of denial is when we block our awareness to such an extent that we don't even take in something that's happening.
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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