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"There is a young Russian here" Wilde wrote, "who is a great amateur of Aubrey's art, who would love to have one.
"Let a man," he wrote, "who is being pursued by his intending murderers, dart into a side street, return immediately, and advance with perfect calmness toward his pursuers, or let him mix with them and seem intent on the case, and he will certainly make himself invisible".
I wrote, "Who is this?" "Are you kidding me?" "No".
"A very calm and easy going mailman," the diarist Victor Klemperer wrote, "who is not at all National Socialist, said, 'Well, he simply sentenced them.'" It did not escape Klemperer's notice that many of the victims had played a role in bringing Hitler to power.
"Here's what I want to know," my e-mailer wrote: "Who is taking care of the cockapoodle that Judy gave Jason so that he would have company when she went to jail?" Fear not: we'll leave no stone -- or kennel receipt -- unturned to bring you the answer.
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There were some, Hertzberg wrote, who were absolutely sure about either the wisdom or the folly of invading Iraq.
We had a character in an episode I wrote who was a real bastard.
"It is abundantly clear," Zhang wrote, "who are the strong and who the weak, who the fit and the unfit, in today's world".
User Desert Fish wrote: "Who were the persons involved?
I was dealing with the character Donald Freed wrote, who was not the real Nixon". The residual effect of the role?
Soon-to-be champion Michael Thayer of Rutgers College bet $0 and wrote "Who was someone I never met?" as his response in the Final Jeopardy! round.
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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