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"It never occurred to me that my choices would be proscribed.
But at public meetings on the extension in both towns, owners who believed their lands would be affected uniformly and vehemently opposed the extension, saying they had no faith that government would pay fair market value for properties they would be proscribed from building on.
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Who would want to end their days in a care home (the term old people's home seems now to be proscribed) opposite a Little Chef?
Art should not be proscribed by materials.
The newspapers just refused to allow themselves to be proscribed".
The German public will rightly ask how different would lending by the proposed European Monetary Union to member countries in distress be from the sort of sovereign bailouts that are supposed to be proscribed by existing Euro-zone agreements.
Even their ambulances will be proscribed from the lanes if they are not running blue lights.
It can be proscribed for entrepreneurial activities, or it can be structured around future income.
These included dropping provisions that would have allowed the banning of groups that are proscribed on the mainland and would have given the police sweeping powers of search.
Though we argued against it, the BBC abided by the Northern Ireland broadcasting ban in the 1980s, and, if the BNP were proscribed, the BBC would abide by that decision too, and the BNP would not appear on Question Time.
Worse, it would authorize an activity — public hunting — that is proscribed by the founding legislation for the national parks and their current management policies.
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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