Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... Both the PDK and manual GT3 models are scalpels on a racing circuit. Combine a lightweight chassis (only about 3,150 pounds) with a wheel/tire package that delivers tenacious grip (Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires on wide 20-inch center-lock wheels) and fade-proof brakes (the Porsche Ceramic Composite Brake upgrade is a must-have option) means the two-door accelerates, corners, and brakes better than most anything available today. Turn-in is sharp and precise, and the power delivery is wonderfully linear right up to the dizzying 9,000 rpm redline. Blast down the front straight, tap the brakes to bleed some speed, turn-in gently (rear-wheel steering lends impressive stability) and then roll onto the power and hang on. Even Porsche Stability Management (PSM) has been optimized for the GT3. It’s not the least bit intrusive, it mends potential missteps, and it rewards a talented driver. ... "
" ... Huber describes what the advent of big data tools and analytics means when combined with our stunning gains in understanding molecular biology – the potential for, as he puts it, “molecular scalpels” that will allow hyper-personalized therapeutics. By knowing nearly everything about your particular illness, and your particular body, and producing molecular drugs specifically tailored not just to your disease, but how an invasion operates in your unique biosystem, health care enters an era unlike anything before. It is no small thing, and no coincidence that both the physicians and our “personal” computers are no longer blind. ... "
" ... This leads me to my final point, one that I have argued for the last 15 years: Self-settled trusts of all varietals should be avoided in all except a few limited circumstances where they might make sense, as set forth above. Self-settled trusts, whether FAPTs or DAPTs, are scalpels to be delicately used in particularly fine situations, and not hammers to be indiscriminately swung as if everything were nails. There are some situations where they work, but they are nothing like the solution of general application that many asset protection planners make them to be. ... "