TM completed segments: 7

Other segments: 26

TM completed words: 49

Other words: 207

TM Completed sentences

Original Translated
Post with links, tags and nbsp es Post with links, tags and nbsp
This is a link and another and the first againimportant tag es This is a link< wpml_nbsp > and another and the first again< wpml_nbsp >important tag
https://google.es https://google.es/aaa
https://wp.test.ate.otgs.work/testqa203/2023/07/13/hello-world/ https://wp.test.ate.otgs.work/testqa203/2023/07/13/hello-world/bbb1111
https://google.es https://google.es/aaa
Internal link es Internal link
https://wp.test.ate.otgs.work/testqa203/2023/07/13/hello-world/ https://wp.test.ate.otgs.work/testqa203/2023/07/13/hello-world/bbb1111

Other sentences

Original Similar TM records
post
1683
Julius Henry Marx was born on October 2, 1890, in Manhattan, New York City.[4] Marx stated that he was born in a room above a butcher's shop on East 78th Street, "Between Lexington and Third", as he told Dick Cavett in a 1969 television interview.[5] The Marx children grew up in a turn-of-the-century building at 179 East 93rd Street off Lexington Avenue in a neighborhood now known as Carnegie Hill on the Upper East Side of the borough of Manhattan. His older brother Harpo, in his memoir Harpo Speaks, called the building "the first real home I knew".[6] It was populated with European immigrants, mostly artisans. Just across the street were the oldest brownstones in the area, owned by people including the well-connected Loew Brothers and William Orth. The Marx family lived there "for about 14 years", Groucho also told Cavett.
/wiki/Manhattan
#cite_note-4
/wiki/Lexington_Avenue
/wiki/Third_Avenue
/wiki/Dick_Cavett
#cite_note-Cavett19690613-5
/wiki/Carnegie_Hill
/wiki/Upper_East_Side
Manhattan
Lexington Avenue
Third Avenue
Dick Cavett
Carnegie Hill
Upper East Side
/wiki/Harpo_Marx
#cite_note-6
Harpo Marx
/wiki/Brownstone
Brownstone
Optional