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The telescoping of history that is the documentarian's art reveals fascinating details that are difficult to judge as they are happening.
A recent development in the realm of criminology has been the applications of computers and mathematical modeling to test a variety of scenarios that are difficult to judge in real life.
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The choices Kerrey faced that night lie so far beyond ordinary experience that his actions, while painful to contemplate, are difficult to judge.
Some others are difficult to judge.
One reason that it's difficult to judge the force of this objection is that the notion of "normal conditions", even given Leplin's clarifications, remains vague (which is not obviously a problem with the analysis; cf. Leplin 2009).
That, too, is difficult to judge.
They also say that it is difficult to judge the financial capacity of tenants, who rarely disclose their total assets.
These confidential deals are so abundant that it is difficult to judge whether a strong evening sales result is a smoke screen.
But he warned that it was difficult to judge Intel's achievement because the company did not identify the materials it planned to use.
Based on all simulation studies, a generalized inference confirms that it is difficult to judge upon the quality of the solutions obtained as far as their global optimality is concerned.
The bombast is so frequent that it is difficult to judge the seriousness … Trump, too, has earned a reputation for exaggeration and sometimes unsubstantiated policy directives, often delivered via Twitter.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com