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Discover Ludwig"a guru of" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe someone who is considered to have extensive knowledge or experience in a particular area. For example, "John is a guru of marketing, having helped many businesses with their marketing strategy over the years."
Exact(47)
He pitched himself online as a guru of manliness.
Chris Anderson is a guru of the information age.
Vigil, for 35 years a guru of distance runners, said Drossin's potential was immense.
He has become a guru of sorts, and his views have grown correspondingly capricious — even perverse at times.
The north London sprinter is coached by John Isaacs, a guru of the former British Olympic medallist John Regis.
"Bill is regarded as a guru of softball, he's one of the legends of the sport," St. John's Coach Amy Kvilhaug said.
Similar(13)
He became something of a guru to a circle of younger sci-fi writers, some of them visiting Americans such as Thomas M Disch and Pamela Zoline.
"He's sort of a guru, sort of a teacher who sort of raises a bar that needs a lot of raising," Kraintz said.
O'Neill follows up where McPhee left off, only to discover that Cook was more of a crank than a revered guru of the Alaskan subsistence movement.
It brings to mind what the revered meditation master, Swami Muktananda noted about a guru worthy of following.
Corel, a 69-year-old Franco-Syrian, is alleged to have been a spiritual guru of radical Islamists in France for more than two decades.
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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