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Idiom
In no mood to do something.
To not feel like doing something; to not want to do something.
Exact(3)
"He understood he was being trained to do something to get the children back," Dr. Cornell said.
PhD candidates are at their infancy in science and being trained to do something different from their education to date – lessons in theory combined with practical labwork – as they move into more independent, innovative research.
"Any cat can be trained to do something," Martin told The Huffington Post.
Similar(55)
This wasn't just training to do something, this was actually doing that thing.
"The hardest thing about being an athlete at a school like this," says Steve Aylsworth, a point guard at Lehigh, "is knowing realistically that college is the end of the road for you, that you're here training to do something completely different, and yet you've been an athlete all your life and the thought of life without sports is a little bit scary".
"It's a sad day when an officer is charged for doing something he was trained to do," said Fraternal Order of Police spokesman Pat Camden who criticized the charges and insisted Servin's name will be cleared through the trial.
This is not what members of Congress or their campaign managers are trained to do, and it has created something of a cultural chasm between the White House and the party apparatus.
Between the scripted works, audience members will suggest premises and -- similar to "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" -- the classically trained singers will do something most classically trained singers aren't trained to do: improvise.
It was not something he was trained to do, but someone had to do it.
Ambassador isn't a 'job' you do every day, its just something you are trained to do.
HeRons how.
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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