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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a drowned" is not correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in contexts where one is referring to a person who has drowned, but it requires additional context or modification to be grammatically correct.
Example: "The search team found a drowned victim in the river."
Alternatives: "a drowning victim" or "a person who drowned".
Exact(12)
Not The Hook. "When you say a labour of love, it sounds like you're rescuing a drowned puppy," says Hutchinson. "This ain't a drowned puppy.
Three hours later he returned with a drowned colleague.
It is like Hitler's bunker or a drowned U-boat.
Fifteen minutes later, I'll be dragged out again, like a drowned seal.
Conversely, postglacial submergence in the southeast has produced one of the finest examples of a drowned coastline.
He didn't need sails on his ark, either, because there was no place to go in a drowned world.
Similar(48)
A small pocket of fans chanting "U-S-A" drowned out the entire home support.
Its story concerns a drowning.
Randy California died in 1997 in a drowning accident in Hawaii.
"This man could sell water to a drowning person".
(Her husband died in a drowning accident in 2010).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com