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With men outnumbering women on TV by two to one in total, the study indicated that women were five times more likely to suffer something the report's authors dubbed "low-level sexism" than men.
Stellan Skarsgård plays a Swedish-born London DI who appears to be a single father with a teenage daughter and, at work, to suffer something of a crush on his lively, mouthy detective sergeant, played by Nicola Walker.
Tyson was mesmerizing because he scarcely seemed like an athlete: in his prime, he wasn't merely a competitor, he was a myth come to life, the personification of something very cruel and very powerful; step into the ring with him and you were likely to suffer something much more catastrophic than a mere loss.
Sometimes you have to suffer something like this to learn.
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(See Hruschka [2015 et alia].) Obligation refers to the "moral necessity" at work in such relationships, by which one is "bound" to do, admit, or suffer something (DJN I.1.21), and thus it applies to all spheres where authority, right, or other forms of moral normativity operate.
I understood that if I was going to sit there and watch them lose, I should suffer something, too.
"You will suffer something worse than death," he is told.
"If you understand what free diving is, it's normal that you suffer something," Campbell said.
The sport did suffer something of a lull in the eighties and nineties when other nations became more professional and invested more money in its athletes.
Surfacing, free divers frequently suffer something called a samba, described in a medical paper from a free-diving symposium as "a bilateral motor tremor, eye gaze deviation, and fine head bobbing".
The lending mistakes of the past crippled the supply of finance in the present.China may suffer something like the first phase of America's slowdown, but it should escape the second.It will not allow any of its big financial intermediaries to go bust.
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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