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The phrase "would be rear" is not correct in written English.
It seems to be a fragment and lacks clarity without additional context. Example: "If the vehicle were to reverse, it would be rear-ended by the truck."
Similar(58)
Young birds would be reared until they fledge, whereupon they would rejoin the wild population.
And secondly, in the time it takes to say 'and bowls', the ball has already pitched and would be rearing at Goochie's throat.
A solution would be rear-wheel steering.
And he'd be reared by parents who had been irrevocably altered by the loss of a baby.
They found everything edible in the vicinity, and, though they'd been reared in metal enclosures, they began digging, digging, digging, stopping only to check out the opposite sex and maybe waggle an ear.
He'd been reared in Texas, one of eight children in difficult circumstances, won a full football scholarship to the University of Tulsa, where he was a starting strong-side linebacker and the first African-American to graduate from the university's drama program.
Her name was Edith and she'd been rear-ended by an illegal.
The hybrid system they plan to develop would be for rear-wheel-drive vehicles.
After outcry, the zoo agreed that Knut would be hand-reared by zoo employee Thomas Dörflein, and hundreds of thousands turned up to watch the rugged keeper gambol with the cuddly beast.
The British car magazine Autocar said in April that the model would be a rear-wheel drive coupe, which might be equipped with a choice of a 2-liter or a 2.4-liter engine.
Additional stacks would be along the rear wall.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com