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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a mixture of gestures" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a combination of different physical movements or signals, often in the context of communication or expression.
Example: "In her performance, she used a mixture of gestures to convey a range of emotions, captivating the audience."
Alternatives: "a blend of gestures" or "a combination of gestures".
Exact(2)
The most popular, like SwiftKey and Swype, use a mixture of gestures and predictive-text technology to provide smarter typing.
Ms. Marin's "Grosse Fugue" (2001) is for four women, dressed in red but with partly loose hair (again suggestive of rehearsal), dancing barefoot in a mixture of gestures, ballet steps and precise tics, keeping aspects of time and structure with Beethoven's extraordinary "Grosse Fuge" (Op. 133).
Similar(58)
The London startup's software keyboard reduces the number of keys displayed to five — hence the 5-Tiles nand — and switches the letter selection mechanism to a mixture of taps and gestures.
The startup's key (ha!) innovation is to reduce the number of keys displayed on the keyboard to five (hence the name), and to switch the letter selection mechanism to a mixture of taps and gestures.
Meet MessagEase: an alternative keyboard that uses a mixture of taps and gestures combined with a radically different keyboard layout designed to speed up text input by minimising the movements typists have to make to reach the keys. .
Vehicle owners will interact with Drive Wise tech through a mixture of apps and gesture control.
The production does not even sound Irish: the cast speak in a mixture of global accents, a gesture that opens up the piece's commentary to cultures beyond Ireland.
Frederick Ashton found his own silent language, a mixture of pure movement and evocative gesture, in ballets like Fille Mal Gardée and A Month in the Country.
Interviewing the cast, Rasim Jafarov, Mir Movsum Mirzazade and Zulfiyye Qurbanova in a mixture of Russian, translated Azeri and hand gestures was both hilarious and will prove challenging when transcribing.
The remaining 763 gestures (92%) comprised a mixture of iconic, metaphoric, deictic (abstract and self-referential), and most commonly beat-like gestures.
They run, like all marathoners, for a mixture of pleasure and pain, personal glory and gesture to others.
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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