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She has an unshakeable sense of well being, her own take on the world and an enthusiasm for life that's infectious.
She has grace and charm and wit, but also a steely determination and an unshakeable sense of principle, as you will discover.
Summer reading, as with other activities undertaken in August, is subject to the dim but unshakeable sense that miracles can be accomplished while on vacation.
Gibson draws a clear contrast between religions — all may endow the faithful with an unshakeable sense of mission, but they're not all based on a similarly humane premise.
If we are to believe the Beethoven mythology, which is based mostly on his letters and reports from his inner circle, Beethoven had an unshakeable sense of his own importance.
It all underlines the band's unshakeable sense of continuity – after all, this is a band that survived the death of its singer – but also their willingness to refine and perfect what they do.
Similar(47)
For instance, people who showed the characteristic clinical symptoms — an unshakeable despondency and sense of guilt that arises from nowhere, responds to nothing, and dissipates for no apparent reason — also displayed some distinctive physical signs: hand-wringing, for instance, and psychomotor retardation, an easily perceived slowing down of movement, thought, and speech.
Maybe he would fill me with that sense of unshakeable faith that must have encouraged Abraham to leave behind everything he knew.
It also seems to be part of the same unshakeable moral code, the sense of knowing exactly who she is, that gives Lewis the strength to cope with anything, from suggesting a rock idol change a track, to turning down Harrods.
Consider how Niall Ferguson, the Conservative-led government's favourite historian, deals with the Kenyan "emergency" in his book Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World: by suppressing it entirely in favour of a Kenyan idyll of "our bungalow, our maid, our smattering of Swahili – and our sense of unshakeable security".
It is also Manto-esque, which is to say that it feels like it could have been imagined, in exactly these tones, with just such a flatly ironic counterpoint for an ending, more than fifty years ago by a man called Saadat Hassan Manto, the writer whose centennial is being marked this year in Lahore amid an unshakeable and vaguely shaming sense of déjà vu.
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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