Arrange: A) Soon, wildflowers recolonised the banks. B) The town removed the old concrete channel from the stream. C) Meanders returned, slowing the water and trapping sediment. D) Birdsong grew louder as insects thrived.
Arrange: A) Soon, wildflowers recolonised the banks. B) The town removed the old concrete channel from the stream. C) Meanders returned, slowing the water and trapping sediment. D) Birdsong grew louder as insects thrived.
Arrange: A) Instead, markets absorbed the shock with surprising ease. B) Many predicted turmoil when the subsidy was withdrawn. C) Inventories had quietly built up in anticipation. D) Firms also hedged prices, softening the blow.
Arrange: A) Instead, markets absorbed the shock with surprising ease. B) Many predicted turmoil when the subsidy was withdrawn. C) Inventories had quietly built up in anticipation. D) Firms also hedged prices, softening the blow.
Arrange: A) That is why migrating to open standards became urgent. B) The vendor’s proprietary format locked clients into costly upgrades. C) As competitors embraced interoperability, the pressure mounted. D) Customers began to question the long-term roadmap.
Arrange: A) That is why migrating to open standards became urgent. B) The vendor’s proprietary format locked clients into costly upgrades. C) As competitors embraced interoperability, the pressure mounted. D) Customers began to question the long-term roadmap.
Arrange: A) Later, as bandwidth grew, streaming displaced downloads. B) Music once arrived as discs purchased at stores. C) Digital compression then made file-sharing commonplace. D) Each shift reordered how artists reached listeners.
Arrange: A) Later, as bandwidth grew, streaming displaced downloads. B) Music once arrived as discs purchased at stores. C) Digital compression then made file-sharing commonplace. D) Each shift reordered how artists reached listeners.
Arrange: A) The team adopted “docs-as-code” to version procedures. B) Before long, audits took hours instead of days. C) Previously, policies lived in scattered spreadsheets. D) Pull requests made changes visible and reviewable.
Arrange: A) The team adopted “docs-as-code” to version procedures. B) Before long, audits took hours instead of days. C) Previously, policies lived in scattered spreadsheets. D) Pull requests made changes visible and reviewable.
Arrange: A) The painter layered glazes to deepen shadows. B) Underpainting established values before colour. C) Final highlights were reserved for the last sitting. D) The portrait thus seemed to glow from within.
Arrange: A) The painter layered glazes to deepen shadows. B) Underpainting established values before colour. C) Final highlights were reserved for the last sitting. D) The portrait thus seemed to glow from within.
Arrange: A) The craftsperson begins by selecting seasoned wood. B) Careful joining prevents warping over time. C) Precision tools are then used to plane each surface. D) Finally, the finish seals out moisture and brings out the grain.
Arrange: A) The craftsperson begins by selecting seasoned wood. B) Careful joining prevents warping over time. C) Precision tools are then used to plane each surface. D) Finally, the finish seals out moisture and brings out the grain.
Arrange: A) By mid-century, that modest device had transformed agriculture. B) Few noticed the prototype irrigation timer at the fair. C) Early adopters reported yields rising with predictable watering. D) Manufacturers then scaled production to meet demand.
Arrange: A) By mid-century, that modest device had transformed agriculture. B) Few noticed the prototype irrigation timer at the fair. C) Early adopters reported yields rising with predictable watering. D) Manufacturers then scaled production to meet demand.
Arrange: A) But the city’s grid still buckled under peak demand. B) Rooftop solar spread quickly as panels became cheaper. C) Batteries helped shave evening spikes. D) Planners then proposed dynamic pricing to smooth usage.
Arrange: A) But the city’s grid still buckled under peak demand. B) Rooftop solar spread quickly as panels became cheaper. C) Batteries helped shave evening spikes. D) Planners then proposed dynamic pricing to smooth usage.
Arrange: A) When the rains failed two years in a row, storage buffers ran dry. B) The city had invested in rooftop harvesting to augment supply. C) Conservation campaigns then targeted high-use neighborhoods. D) In the following monsoon, reservoirs recovered to safe levels.
Arrange: A) When the rains failed two years in a row, storage buffers ran dry. B) The city had invested in rooftop harvesting to augment supply. C) Conservation campaigns then targeted high-use neighborhoods. D) In the following monsoon, reservoirs recovered to safe levels.
Arrange: A) Others insist that literacy is inseparable from context. B) Some argue that reading is merely decoding symbols. C) The debate over what counts as literacy has persisted for decades. D) As digital media evolved, the discussion only grew more layered.
Arrange: A) Others insist that literacy is inseparable from context. B) Some argue that reading is merely decoding symbols. C) The debate over what counts as literacy has persisted for decades. D) As digital media evolved, the discussion only grew more layered.
Arrange: A) New entrants undercut incumbents with nimble operations. B) Deregulation opened the sector to competition. C) Consumers enjoyed lower prices and wider choices. D) Legacy firms were forced to rethink bloated cost structures.
Arrange: A) New entrants undercut incumbents with nimble operations. B) Deregulation opened the sector to competition. C) Consumers enjoyed lower prices and wider choices. D) Legacy firms were forced to rethink bloated cost structures.
Arrange: A) The hikers underestimated how quickly fog could erase landmarks. B) A compass reading, not memory, got them back on course. C) Visibility dropped to a few metres within minutes. D) Their footprints had already vanished in the moss.
Arrange: A) The hikers underestimated how quickly fog could erase landmarks. B) A compass reading, not memory, got them back on course. C) Visibility dropped to a few metres within minutes. D) Their footprints had already vanished in the moss.
Arrange: A) He opened with a puzzle to hook the audience. B) After a brief detour into history, he laid out the core idea. C) Examples from everyday life then grounded the abstraction. D) He closed by inviting questions and critiques.
Arrange: A) He opened with a puzzle to hook the audience. B) After a brief detour into history, he laid out the core idea. C) Examples from everyday life then grounded the abstraction. D) He closed by inviting questions and critiques.
Arrange: A) The biologist tracked the birds using tiny GPS tags. B) Unexpectedly, several detoured to urban rooftops at dusk. C) This suggested a new reliance on heat plumes rising from buildings. D) Initially, the team assumed the flock followed the river south.
Arrange: A) The biologist tracked the birds using tiny GPS tags. B) Unexpectedly, several detoured to urban rooftops at dusk. C) This suggested a new reliance on heat plumes rising from buildings. D) Initially, the team assumed the flock followed the river south.
Arrange: A) The instrument’s faint signal was buried in noise. B) Engineers cooled the sensors to reduce thermal interference. C) As a result, the telescope detected planets it had missed. D) Initially, data looked indistinguishable from random fluctuations.
Arrange: A) The instrument’s faint signal was buried in noise. B) Engineers cooled the sensors to reduce thermal interference. C) As a result, the telescope detected planets it had missed. D) Initially, data looked indistinguishable from random fluctuations.
Arrange: A) First, the team interviewed users to elicit pain points. B) The redesign cut onboarding time by half. C) Next, low-fidelity prototypes were tested and iterated. D) Those insights informed a pared-down flow that removed distractions.
Arrange: A) First, the team interviewed users to elicit pain points. B) The redesign cut onboarding time by half. C) Next, low-fidelity prototypes were tested and iterated. D) Those insights informed a pared-down flow that removed distractions.
Arrange: A) The curator grouped works not by era but by theme. B) Visitors thereby traced ideas migrating across centuries. C) Traditional galleries arrange paintings chronologically. D) This exhibition challenged that habit deliberately.
Arrange: A) The curator grouped works not by era but by theme. B) Visitors thereby traced ideas migrating across centuries. C) Traditional galleries arrange paintings chronologically. D) This exhibition challenged that habit deliberately.
Arrange: A) At scale, the platform struggled with moderation. B) Early users enjoyed tight-knit conversations. C) As membership ballooned, norms fragmented. D) Tools lagged behind the pace of growth.
Arrange: A) At scale, the platform struggled with moderation. B) Early users enjoyed tight-knit conversations. C) As membership ballooned, norms fragmented. D) Tools lagged behind the pace of growth.
Arrange: A) What began as a local recycling group sparked a national network. B) Volunteers used simple toolkits to start chapters. C) A newsletter stitched stories and tips across regions. D) Sponsors later funded training for organisers.
Arrange: A) What began as a local recycling group sparked a national network. B) Volunteers used simple toolkits to start chapters. C) A newsletter stitched stories and tips across regions. D) Sponsors later funded training for organisers.
Arrange: A) When regulators raised capital requirements, lending briefly tightened. B) Banks responded by retaining more earnings to shore up buffers. C) Over time, credit growth resumed as balance sheets strengthened. D) The policy aimed to reduce systemic risk after the crisis.
Arrange: A) When regulators raised capital requirements, lending briefly tightened. B) Banks responded by retaining more earnings to shore up buffers. C) Over time, credit growth resumed as balance sheets strengthened. D) The policy aimed to reduce systemic risk after the crisis.
Arrange: A) Their music, initially dismissed, slowly found a devoted audience. B) The duo blended classical structures with electronic textures. C) Critics later hailed the experiment as ahead of its time. D) Early listeners struggled to classify the sound.
Arrange: A) Their music, initially dismissed, slowly found a devoted audience. B) The duo blended classical structures with electronic textures. C) Critics later hailed the experiment as ahead of its time. D) Early listeners struggled to classify the sound.
Arrange: A) The chef, however, prized restraint over spectacle. B) In an age of viral dishes, culinary trends change overnight. C) He let seasonal produce dictate the day’s menu. D) Patrons returned for the quiet confidence of his cooking.
Arrange: A) The chef, however, prized restraint over spectacle. B) In an age of viral dishes, culinary trends change overnight. C) He let seasonal produce dictate the day’s menu. D) Patrons returned for the quiet confidence of his cooking.
Arrange: A) Investors chased momentum, ignoring earnings. B) When sentiment turned, prices corrected violently. C) In that frenzy, sober analysis seemed quaint. D) A handful of patient buyers then found bargains.
Arrange: A) Investors chased momentum, ignoring earnings. B) When sentiment turned, prices corrected violently. C) In that frenzy, sober analysis seemed quaint. D) A handful of patient buyers then found bargains.
Arrange the sentences A–D: A) She began by sketching disparate scenes that refused to cohere. B) Only later did a central motif emerge, binding the fragments. C) The novelist did not outline the story in advance. D) That discovery prompted a thorough rewrite of the opening chapters.
Arrange the sentences A–D: A) She began by sketching disparate scenes that refused to cohere. B) Only later did a central motif emerge, binding the fragments. C) The novelist did not outline the story in advance. D) That discovery prompted a thorough rewrite of the opening chapters.
Arrange: A) To their surprise, the model inferred grammar without labels. B) Researchers trained a network on vast amounts of text. C) It then generalized to tasks they had not explicitly taught. D) This revived debates about what constitutes “understanding.”
Arrange: A) To their surprise, the model inferred grammar without labels. B) Researchers trained a network on vast amounts of text. C) It then generalized to tasks they had not explicitly taught. D) This revived debates about what constitutes “understanding.”
Arrange: A) Yet the algorithm repeatedly failed on edge cases. B) The team claimed state-of-the-art accuracy on benchmarks. C) After auditing the training set, they discovered a sampling bias. D) Retraining with diverse data improved real-world performance.
Arrange: A) Yet the algorithm repeatedly failed on edge cases. B) The team claimed state-of-the-art accuracy on benchmarks. C) After auditing the training set, they discovered a sampling bias. D) Retraining with diverse data improved real-world performance.
Arrange: A) The sculptor worked directly in stone without preliminary models. B) Chips flew as the form emerged from the block. C) Every strike risked removing more than intended. D) Viewers later marvelled at the vitality of the piece.
Arrange: A) The sculptor worked directly in stone without preliminary models. B) Chips flew as the form emerged from the block. C) Every strike risked removing more than intended. D) Viewers later marvelled at the vitality of the piece.
Arrange: A) At first, the village welcomed the dam as a promise of steady power. B) Years later, silt accumulation reduced generation capacity. C) Soon, seasonal flooding patterns shifted, affecting crops. D) The community then demanded a re-evaluation of water releases.
Arrange: A) At first, the village welcomed the dam as a promise of steady power. B) Years later, silt accumulation reduced generation capacity. C) Soon, seasonal flooding patterns shifted, affecting crops. D) The community then demanded a re-evaluation of water releases.
Arrange: A) The expedition’s maps revealed inlets uncharted by earlier surveys. B) Storms scattered the fleet for weeks. C) When seas calmed, they stitched logs into a continuous record. D) That synthesis corrected several long-standing errors.
Arrange: A) The expedition’s maps revealed inlets uncharted by earlier surveys. B) Storms scattered the fleet for weeks. C) When seas calmed, they stitched logs into a continuous record. D) That synthesis corrected several long-standing errors.