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The phrase "a edifice" is not correct in written English.
The correct form is "an edifice" because "edifice" begins with a vowel sound.
Example: "The architect designed an edifice that would stand the test of time."
Alternatives: "a structure" or "a building."
Exact(1)
But has current boss Peter Voser also been presiding over a edifice that looked shinier than it was?
Similar(57)
But Eden Park is an edifice, a stadium rather than a cricket ground, with a capacity of 50,000.
It is an edifice, a genuine edifice, a handsome, Roman Revival, white terra-cotta edifice, and it isn't really very old; it was put up during the upsurge of architectural grandiosity in Brooklyn in the early nineteen-hundreds.
The European Union is an edifice, a unique interaction between the supranational level and the Member States.
And the difference between an edifice and a ruin may be hard to detect.
Sebald understands that a life is an edifice, which we build partly to hide its foundations.
Her picture is functionally a picture of an edifice, like that of the White House on the twenty-dollar bill.
But in the hands of pragmatic bureaucrats, all this becomes in the long run is an empty shell, an edifice, as you said in your speech.
Whether this adds up to a cultural renaissance or an edifice contest remains unclear.
A successful marriage is an edifice that must be rebuilt every day.
And George W. Bush in 2004 portrayed an epic struggle involving "outlaw regimes" and "a day of fire" pitted against an "ideal of freedom" and an "edifice of character".
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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