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At Wednesday's argument, Steven J. Wells, a lawyer for the National Meat Association, which is challenging the law, said that so fine a distinction was unworkable.
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April 19 2015 One of the reasons that our Ivy League schools put out so many fine composers is that so many fine composers serve on their faculties.
"There was flaking that was so fine it couldn't be seen with the naked eye," Ms. Barten said.
"It isn't often that something so fine and delicate enters the store," he says, referring to a particular fabric but perhaps meaning Esther herself.
Invertebrate central neurons typically possess a cell body connected to dendrites with a thin process called primary neurite that is so fine and long as to separate itself electrotonically from the other parts of the cell.
The activity of individual neurons within such a group of action-sensitive cells can be traced with electrodes that have tips so fine that they can be placed against a single cell.
"We were able to obtain finely powdered coal — a dust, really — that was so fine that when you rubbed it between your fingers it turned greasy," Mr. Ulrich explained.
Powdered sugar is exactly what it sounds like: sugar that has been ground so fine that it becomes a powder.
Raine twice quotes Eliot's admiring observation that Henry James possessed "a mind so fine that no idea could violate it".
Takahashi (1991) underlined that the involved material was so fine that it had a relative depth of about 105.
This may mislead the dictionary updating, thus leads to a result that is not so fine.
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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