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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a ogre" is not correct in written English; it should be "an ogre." You can use it when referring to a mythical creature in a story or conversation, particularly when introducing or describing the character.
Example: "In the fairy tale, there was an ogre who lived in a dark forest and frightened the villagers."
Alternatives: "a giant" or "a monster."
Exact(1)
These require the Zogre Flesh Eaters to be completed, and a ogre coffin keys.
Similar(59)
A fable about an ogre in a country of tomorrow, who ate up all the clocks in the town.
"Luciani is an ogre, a father who eats his children," Mr. Bidegain said.
Saddam Hussein was a torturer, an ogre; he was, the president declared, even worse than Hitler.At first this proved effective.
("My Brilliant Friend" features a village, an ogre, and magical shoes). Characters are deep and complicated; their interactions are charged.
But Brian d'Arcy James and the hyper-talented Sutton Foster find a sweet, goofy chemistry as an ogre and a princess (2 30).
The ref's a goblin; the commentators are an ogre and a vampire; players punch more often than they pass.
(Avon, 1 $3.95). Esk, the son of an ogre and a nymph, defends the inhabitants of a paradise.
"But, she's not an ogre or a horrible woman". In fact, Roberts knows a lot of Mimis.
Make that 11, if you consider Shrek -- wherein an Ogre wins a Princess's hand -- as an anti-racist metaphor.
The league was billing Lesnar as an ogre with rabies, a textbook heel, a natural role for a volatile guy whose head alone seems to weigh two hundred pounds.
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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