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But will it ever manage to stop us using the term in everyday speech?
With legislators calling for his dismissal today, Mr. Kelly, the spokesman, acknowledged using the term in what he described as a private conversation.
'I'm using the term in a very ironic sense - 3,000 people being killed; it's a terrible tragedy, but in the scale of human tragedy it's very small.
But there was support for Clarkson from the education secretary, Michael Gove, who urged the BBC not to sack him for using the term "in error" during filming.
"They think the only religiously sanctioned way to spread Islam is through jihad," he said, using the term in the sense of "holy war".
In a 1984 citation from The Knoxville Journal, the television interviewer Mike Wallace was quoted using the term in its current sense: "Wallace called that a 'gotcha question".' Gotcha!
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One former DEP employee told the Herald that "using the terms in reports would would bring unwanted attention to their projects".
Some flippantly call these aid workers "do-gooders" or "adventure seekers," using the terms in a subtly pejorative sense, somehow insinuating that their motivations are impure.
We then designed patterns to extract angiogenesis terms and events using the terms in the vocabularies.
Physicists also use the term in this sense.
James, however, uses the term in an elastic way.
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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