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Exact(17)
Even though they mean the same thing in this experiment, when the fake doctor framed the option as "do not resuscitate," 61 percent asked that CPR be performed.
Less certain is whether they mean the same thing.Xi Jinping unveiled the concept on a visit to the American capital last year, before he took over the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party.
But while Miller agrees that hipster has morphed into a negative term, it is less about the word and more about what it represents: "Growing up, we just used other words – 'scenester' at university, 'trendies' at school – and they mean the same.
In other words: for all practical purposes, they mean the same thing; use impractical, as it's shorter impressionism, impressionist painting in can lead to ambiguous headline constructions such as "Marconi chief in board clearout" – is the chief clearing out the board or being cleared out with them? in or on? in the team (UK), on the team (US).
"Once you combine 'necessarily' with 'Everything is physical,' " Professor Neale explained, "there are actually two ways of doing it: 'Necessarily, everything is physical' and 'Everything is necessarily physical.' They sound as if they mean the same, and a grammarian might say, 'What's the difference?' But in logic they're quite different".
They mean the same.
Similar(43)
They meant the same thing.
Last spring, a group of 10 Duke University students sat around a dinner table discussing how homogenous their campus felt -- by which they meant the same style of dress, same handbag, same political attitudes.
The letter also claimed that "at various points in the discussion Ken used the words Zionist, Jewish and Israeli, interchangeably, as if they meant the same, and did so in a pejorative manner".
Lieberman's use of both the Yiddish noun and the English verb in the same paragraph, suggesting wrongly that they meant the same, resulted in the compounding of the error in a statement by his longtime across-the-lines soulmate, William J. Bennett.
McCue and Davis hired scientists from MIT to build a dictionary of more than 500,000 pronunciations, so that Tellme could distinguish between "Mih-ZOOR-ee" and "Ma-ZUR-ah" and know they meant the same thing: Missouri.
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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