Exact(5)
If it became a for-profit company, it would issue stock, most of which would belong at first to the state, which would be expected to sell it.
True, he doesn't propose to give it back in cash, but he wants to put it into personal accounts, which would belong mainly to young workers and therefore be unavailable to support the currently middle-aged workers that reserve was supposed to protect.
Rather, I am saying that writing such as Montaigne's Essays raises profound questions about how it is best to be described, and is too powerful to be considered, finally, either under the aspect of philosophical writing or as something which would belong comfortably to the descriptive games of literary criticism.
The tactic helped Balch draw a clear line between any intellectual property (IP) that might emerge from his academic research group, which would belong to Georgia Tech, and that possibly emanating from his financial work and owned by Lucena.
It is also necessary to say that among the fossil shells I wanted to describe, only those that we meet on hills appear, while I will not mention those belonging to the high Apennine mountains, which would belong to a completely different conchology.
Similar(55)
But even more central than Kafka to me was Mallarmé, and in particular his monomaniacal notion of the book-to-come, the giant tome to which everything would belong, whose bringing-into-being or "writing" requires a total remodelling of the very structure of the book itself.
"We always envisioned Flaviar as a lifestyle club to which members would belong for years," says Petkovic.
He set which territories would belong to Curuzu Cuatiá and Mandisoví, and organised their urban layout around the chapel and school.
The advantage of the IELex is that known borrowings are not only marked as such, but that they are also assigned to the cognate sets to which they would belong, if they were not borrowings.
The Isle of Ely was mentioned in some statutes as a county palatine; this provided an explanation of the bishop's royal privileges and judicial authority, which would normally belong to the sovereign; but legal authorities such as Sir Edward Coke did not completely endorse the form of words.
Rhezelius read it as a name, Onarius, which would have belonged to a third son, whereas Verelius, Peringskiöld, Dijkman and Celsius interpreted it as the pronoun annarr meaning "the other" and referring to Ótryggr, an interpretation supported by Wessén and Jansson (1953 1958), and by Rundata (see below).
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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