Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(1)
The phrase "a buddy which" is not correct in standard written English.
The correct relative pronoun to use in this context is "who" when referring to people.
Example: "I have a buddy who loves to play basketball."
Alternatives: "a friend who" or "a companion that".
Exact(1)
Everyone in New York and L.A. has had this experience: you make a plan for dinner with a buddy, which he cancels with a lame, last minute excuse ("I'm just exhausted").
Similar(59)
So developers have started developing games like Hangman for instance or an app called "Stranger Buddy" which is like Chat Roulette in text form.
Other apps that claim to help in the aftermath include Earthquake Buddy, which will send an alert to four contacts if a phone detects an earthquake, with your GPS co-ordinates attached.
Despite the recent rash of undercarriage incidents, Joe Skiba, the Giants' equipment director, said there had not been any players inquiring about traditional cups or banana cups or even something called the Nutty Buddy, which claims to be a revolutionary design.
The Taste Buddy, which was unveiled last week, is a new invention, still in its prototype stage, that changes our sense of what things taste like by emitting thermal and electric signals that stimulate, or rather delude, the taste buds.
The few people who did not smell a flimflammer jockeyed to become his new best buddy, which meant that he never had to pay his bill -- not as long as he kept sending folks to a local car dealership to choose the color of their new Mercury Cougars.
However, much like the ill-fated Craigs Little Buddy, which was banned in August, there's a very good chance Craigslist will be banning them too.
Rebhorn renders it as "good buddy," which, as usual with his slang, is out of date but accurate.
My mum is Canadian so I often find myself replying "Thanks, buddy" which can sound passive-aggressive.
They diligently followed that advice and garnered several patents, including three related to the Battery Buddy, which earned them more than $1 million in licensing fees.
We got onto the bus, he asked me some questions, I covered for my buddy (which earned me street cred) and then he searched my pockets... and found the hash.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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