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The journey from wretchedness to redemption is one of the most common narrative arcs in memoir, from St. Augustine onward.
"Sometimes Russians are too used to living in wretchedness to be able to enjoy something of quality," he said.
I believe that Afshan has internalised guilt and wretchedness to an unprecedented – but, to Asian women, not unfamiliar – degree, and she cannot help but blame herself.
In the first century A.D., kept from his wife, Calpurnia, by legal drudgery, he found time to write that he sought refuge in "toil" and "wretchedness" to distract himself from the pain of their separation.
Of course, Adam is a man of God, so the audience expect his honesty to be whole-hearted, his feelings of wretchedness to be played out in the programme with suitable expressions of remorse and regret, until which time Alex can forgive him.
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I wonder if there is a place to rent some wretchedness just to fill out the family lore?
The web of wretchedness extends to cover him and Simon as well.
Out of sight are pockets of wretchedness similar to slums in developing countries such as India.
GABE: Marriages all go through a kind of base-line wretchedness from time to time, but we do what we can to ride those patches out.
In "Resolution and Independence", that great despondent William Wordsworth describes the descent from exuberance to wretchedness as a law of the physical universe.
Oh, the sacred misery of it all, the authoritarian wretchedness, the rocking to and fro - like disturbed children, the head-banging and the wailing.
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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