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Discover Ludwig"I've appended" is correct and usable in written English.
It is usually used to mean that something has been added or attached to something else, often at the end. For example: "I've appended a document to my application, containing additional information."
Exact(6)
And following today's recipe, I've appended a list of my holiday favorites, culled from the Recipes for Health archive.
[*In panel terminology, "extremely likely" denotes a 95-percent likelihood.] I've appended links to the sections of the draft report below.
At the bottom of this post I've appended another table from the report, showing that there are wide gaps not only between countries but within countries (the poorest of the poor having the least access to contraceptives).
[*At the bottom of the post, I've appended an excerpt from a highly relevant 2002 Nature paper.] [*Adam Frank posted a great piece on the NPR blog on other factors complicating this question.] While the echo of Frankenstein in that Twitter moniker can imply this is a human-created meteorological monster, it's just not that simple.
I've appended the 1990 interview below the current conversation.
I've appended the whole thing at the bottom of the post, for your bemusement.
Similar(52)
Toward that end, I have appended below yet another draft of what a pro-democracy constitutional amendment could look like.
Below this interview, to provide a point of comparison, I have appended excerpts from an earlier discussion we had in 2007 about identity questions.
That's forty-six more years than the time elapsed since we published our most read archival piece of 2015, "Hiroshima," which we've appended to the slide slow as well.
At the least, he said, I should have appended a note "explaining the difference between a news story and a column of opinion".
Then, show them The Times's interactive world map, "Where I Was," to which thousands have appended notes describing their emotions about and memories of that day.
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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