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The phrase "Consigned to oblivion" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe something that has been forgotten or relegated to a state of being unknown or unremembered. Example: "After the scandal, the politician was consigned to oblivion, rarely mentioned in the news again."
Exact(39)
Sadly, after this Christmas season these pieces of spendable art will be consigned to oblivion.
What stories are being consigned to oblivion as it is dismantled?
If he wins Labour could fall apart or be consigned to oblivion.
Lizbekistan eventually acquired several thousand citizens before being consigned to oblivion last year.
Rodriguez, they noted, had not been consigned to oblivion in Michigan.
The event would have been consigned to oblivion had the newspaper not digitised its archives a few years later.
Similar(21)
But less so, lately, especially here in the United States, where we whistle past our graveyards and keep our dead at greater distance, consigned to oblivions we seldom visit, estranged and denatured, tidy and Disney-fied memorial parks with names like those of golf courses or megachurches.
"Barry" would be a great deal less foreign-sounding than Barack, one media consultant told him, and "Hussein" was a middle name reminiscent, for many, of an Iraqi tyrant and worth consigning to oblivion.
Because of the digital revolution, he argues, it is easier to keep everything – the drunken email you sent your boss, the photo you put on Facebook in which you're doing something non-CV-enhancing to an inflatable cow – rather than go through the palaver of deciding what to consign to oblivion.
In his book Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age, Mayer-Schönberger points out that the digital revolution makes it is easier to keep everything – the drunken email you sent your boss, the wacky photo you put on Facebook – rather than go through the palaver of deciding what to consign to oblivion.
This is the same thing that others, including startup Shoebox, and Dropbox with Carousel, are also clueing in on, but Google has an immense wealth of data to draw from to turn the aimless shotgun fire of user vacation photos into a focused emotional asset that they might actually look at again, instead of consigning to oblivion.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com