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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a familiarity that makes" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a sense of comfort or ease that arises from knowing someone or something well.
Example: "There is a familiarity that makes it easy to communicate openly with my colleagues."
Alternatives: "an ease that creates" or "a comfort that allows".
Exact(1)
Even atheists in Japan know them, a familiarity that makes Kondo play differently at home.
Similar(59)
But because Neustrelitz houses young men and women who have committed more serious crimes more than half of them violent there was a familiarity that made the contrast easier to digest.
You might gain a level of familiarity that makes it a little difficult to pull the trigger".
When he comes to England there is a sense of familiarity that makes it a special place.
Obama represents something enigmatic in a political arena where everything before had come to seem trite and depressingly predictable; it's the very newness of him, the lack of familiarity, that makes us wonder if perhaps he signals not only a political departure but also a transformed society.
It's sensations of familiarity that make a strange place feel more like home even if I was seeing this stuff for the first time, I'd already been there virtually, and with few real friends to my name in the city, it was as close to a welcome as I was likely to get.
It's that sense of familiarity that made it that much harder for his victims to speak up without risking public backlash, scrutiny and dismissal of their claims against a person with considerable power and influence. .
In other words, familiarity requires that a donkey that makes the CDQ-containing consequent true in s2 also be present in s1.
Most pub quizzes in New York test general knowledge, often mixing in an audio round that makes familiarity with recent pop songs a must.
Whether or not he Andrew Clay Silverstein actually is this person should matter little to the audience's consumption of his act; there was and is something identifiable about it, a familiarity that you can recognize and that makes you smile, even if it also makes you groan.
It's in the intangible familiarity; a sound heard through a haze that makes Burial's music as generational as it is acutely personal, identifying a deep, confounding sense of loss. .
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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