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They have also forever tarnished the word 'maverick'maverick
In the 1940s, before the city became tarnished by words like "blight" and "urban decay," Newark was an industrial powerhouse whose leading citizens thought its public art should reflect its ambitions and rival the collections of New York, Philadelphia and Chicago.
Several networks also say they plan to disclose much more about the sources of their information and the reasons for their conclusions, minimizing use of the now-tarnished word "projected" as much as possible in discussing preliminary reports of results.
The word "eugenics" has been tarnished by its long association with racism and the abrogation of civil liberties.
"But this is the inevitable consequence of hollow words, red lines crossed, tarnished moral influence".
Although not laid at Mr. Richardson's door, corruption scandals have also tarnished the state — "pay to play," in the words of critics.
The Sydney Morning Herald apprehended this in their editorial on 26 July, when they lamented that "some ill-chosen and insensitive words at an inopportune time have tarnished [Alhadeff's] otherwise fine work".
But he was tarnished by fund-raising fiascoes invoked by the very words "Buddhist temple" and "no controlling legal authority".
"The lesson for leaders is that your word should be gold, because once it's tarnished, there's no going back.
It was still tarnished inside, but it bore in beautifully graven letters the words: "Remove the Tarnish".
"Limits to Growth" simply misunderstood the meaning of the word "reserves".The Club of Rome's mistakes have not tarnished its confidence.
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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