0Context:02br 02br 00This scandal has firmed my decision to finishing my wittings on two related articles. One is entitled “What drives scientists craze and cause them to misconduct?” (Scientific Ethics 1, in press, 2006). The other is “Why “top” journals are often so unlucky in infecting top scandals” (Scientific Ethics 1, 01b01font00in press02font02b00, 2006). There two papers mainly discuss the pre-scandal events, i.e., either the making of scandals by “scientists” or the publishing of scandal-contained papers by “scientific journals”. However, in this paper, I will focus on the post- scandal events on how scientific journals handle the sandals, especially the behavior of Science in dealing with the after-mess of this Korean stem cell scandal.02br 02br 00------------------------------------------------02br 02br 00 In press = in print?0-
Top answer
0Yes I think we can assume so. The paragraph is 01u 00very02u 00 badly written as a whole with lots of errors. 0-
— Nona the brit
0Yes I think we can assume so.
The paragraph is 01u 00very02u 00 badly written as a whole with lots of errors.
0-
Free · every Monday
Get the Weekly English Kit 📬
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
0 Thank you nona the brit. 02br 02br 00 BTW, would any native English speaker reedite my sentence below:02br 00 (Since the paragragh is poorly written, I tried to edit one of the sentences: )02br 02br 00 Original: This scandal has firmed my decision to finishing my wittings on two related articles. 02br 02br
0I interpreted the original a little differently. The articles are not about this specific scandal. There are two articles covering different aspects of scandals and this most recent scandal has just pushed the writer into finishing them.02br 02br 00I can't help wondering if 'scandal' is quite the right word here anyway.02br 02br 00I'd say something like0