Very neat. One writer speculates that the term originated
in the practice of New England housewives meticulously arranging apple slices
on a pie crust. However, more likely it was a British corruption of the French
nappes pliées, neat as “folded linen,” from the early seventeenth century. By the
time Dickens used it in Our Mutual Friend (1865) it was already a cliché.
Three individuals have been apprehended in the case of the lithium pools,
according to the Prosecutor's Office.
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So far, three individuals have been apprehended in the investigation into
the industrial evaporation pools of Bolivian Lithium Deposits (YLB),
reported ...
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