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Discover LudwigThe phrase "I often speculate" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when discussing thoughts, theories, or possibilities about a subject without having definitive evidence. Example: "I often speculate about the reasons behind the sudden changes in the market trends."
Exact(3)
I often speculate about the many possible reasons for the decline in our outdoor swimming habits.
I often speculate about what some new research might lead to, but at the same time I try to cover the caveats that come with it – the drawbacks, limitations and alternative explanations if there are any.
Re "The Perils of Putting National Leaders on the Couch" (June 29): When I read about politicians or public figures whose personalities, attitudes and behavior I dislike, I often speculate about any transgressions they may have committed as children or adolescents, like bullying, shoplifting or cheating.
Similar(56)
Although it was part of a more complex whole, I often speculated about what would happen if, for one year, we were to do away with the interview.
I often speculated that the Bikini Killings were a twisted, homoerotic death ritual triggered by amphetamine psychosis.
I've often speculated on what we would do legally if we suddenly found a holdout band of Neanderthals who'd survived in some hidden part of Andalusia.
So they came up with brilliant dialogue to disguise that fact: Louis Renault, the police chief played by Claude Raines, asks: "I've often speculated on why you don't return to America.
My wife and I have often speculated that the literacy crisis that Gov. George W. Bush of Texas mentions in his literacy proposals (front page, March 29) arises from a cultural shift in sensibilities.
In fact, I've often speculated that my shadowy, forgotten colleagues from long ago created these works of art out of enduring materials specifically to span the time, to outlast the individual short life of a human being, or even of the tribe or the society that created them.
I have often speculated why the Fordham Institute's Petrilli and Hess joined the "reform" camp in our nation's educational civil war.
Inhabitants in Western Equatoria often speculate that the government has ambitions to occupy their land and curtail their rights.
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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