0 used to remark that something is surprising but true:
Strangely enough, in a kind of double reversion, it inevitably also presents the new as the result of something that never happened.
Strangely enough, it is unusual to read about the basis of care work.
This is a very natural question, which, strangely enough, has remained unnoticed until now (as far as we know).
Strangely enough, however, though selfstyled patriots of all stripes imagined schooling as indispensable to the republic, schools themselves remained steadfastly local institutions.
Strangely enough, the village head was not among the suspects who had been detained in the afternoon.
Strangely enough, the obligation to one's brother is derived exclusively from the obligation to one's parents, and the consequences of repudiation are drastically severe.
This provides an irresistible cue to highlight an alternative predicational account that encompasses not only the theoretical dichotomy but also, strangely enough, the canine properties.
Strangely enough, this desire is less cultivated in architecture school than either skill development or novelty.