Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "a gauntlet from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where one is referring to a challenge or a series of difficulties that originate from a specific source.
Example: "He threw down a gauntlet from the rival team, challenging us to a match."
Alternatives: "a challenge from" or "a test from".
Exact(4)
And he would challenge America just as he had provoked Athens, and possibly be prosecuted and condemned for it a second time.Socrates throws down a gauntlet from antiquity to America and all other democracies.
In July, Joyce rebuffed a gauntlet from dissident director Samuel Heyman Samuel Heyman, who sought control of the company, which began in 1912 as a spinoff of DuPont's booming explosives business.
The audiologist process was very similar, kind of like a really intense wet willie, but what I ended up with is semi-rigid silicone earplugs that truly fit like a glove — a soft calfskin glove rather than a gauntlet from a suit of armor.
Effluent enters a NEWater plant and is progressively stripped of contaminants as it runs a gauntlet from woven mesh screens to microfiltration membranes to reverse osmosis membranes -- whose pores are so tiny that even viruses and metal ions can't pass through.
Similar(56)
Starting with Michael Gordon's "Industry," a 1993 work for solo cello, was a gently flung gauntlet; from a placid, repeated three-note motto, the piece swells to roiling, distorted noise.
The announcement was widely praised by "alt scene" followers, many of whom regularly have to run a gauntlet of abuse – from the verbal to physical – purely because of the way they choose to look.
Oh yes, X-Box also faces a gauntlet of competition from the likes of Sony sne, Sega Enterprises segny and Nintendo.
His daily commute has come to include a gauntlet of questions from police.
So to save themselves from running a gauntlet of process servers reaching from California to Massachusetts, and to make clear that they have not one but half-a-dozen unreliable witnesses, Sorkin and Fincher adopted the wise strategy of turning the narrative into a courtroom drama.
Two of the fingers on her left hand were encased in articulated silver sheaths that looked as if they'd been purloined from a gauntlet in the Met's Arms and Armor Court.
Interestingly, if you go to Google to investigate the pros and cons of "unschooling," you will find some objective analysis, but mostly you'll be bombarded with a gauntlet of opposing opinions, from "unschoolers" who defend the practice with everything in them to those who believe children are getting the short end of the stick on many levels.
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