Must my anxious management, my prudent retrenchments, dear Margaretta's savings, all go!
A separative error can reveal [to] us that a certain manuscript was not copied from another manuscript. […] For example, the scribe of manuscript A missed a whole line of a text when he was copying. Now the text in manuscript A makes no sense (because a whole line is missing), but it would be impossible for the scribe of J to know what exactly is missing and to add it absolutely correctly. If J, then has kept this line which is clearly missing from A, we can argue that J is not a copy of A, but a copy of another manuscript, which had not missed that line […]
That close call encouraged Wales to launch another series of attacks that ended when lock Louis Deacon killed the ball illegally in the shadow of England's posts.
Professor Levine distinguishes two kinds of cabotage: primary cabotage which can be compared with ninth freedom cabotages and long-haul limited cabotage which can be compared with eighth freedom cabotage […].