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This part of the confirmation hearing will be tricky in that Ms. Yellen must tread a line between easy money as economic stimulus and tough regulation to crack down on the distortions brought about excess liquidity.
It's different from many festivals in that concerts on two main stages are free (tickets for smaller venues cost about £15) and people don't tend to camp (tricky in that wind).
What was tricky in that scene is there was more dialogue in there that ended up getting cut out.
So, unlike Lupus, HLH is tricky in that it's often a result of an infection caused by a medication prescribed for a pre-existing condition like Crohn's Disease.
This one is "tricky, in that you had to have the tank going along at a fairly close proximity to a cliff face," says Armstrong.
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The sonnets were trickier in that they were often written in personae other than his own.
Non-cash donations are trickier, in that they must now pass a "good condition" standard that is only vaguely defined.
The pilot's job is made trickier in that the aircraft's design is so honed to keeping it in the air that the plane will only land when the wing is fully stalled, and the lack of electrically-powered controls makes the plane very physically demanding at lower altitudes.
"It's a terribly tricky balance in that sense.
Wales has found himself in a tricky spot, in that he is now often surrounded by people who are Wikipedia subjects.
In his speech, Mr. Brown sought to distance himself in part from the economic policies of the past, a tricky maneuver in that he was in charge of the country's finances under the previous prime minister, Tony Blair.
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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