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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a rope from a" is grammatically correct but incomplete and may not convey a clear meaning without additional context.
You can use it when describing the source or origin of a rope, but it needs to be followed by more information to be fully understandable.
Example: "I found a rope from a shipwreck washed up on the shore."
Alternatives: "a rope belonging to a" or "a rope sourced from a".
Exact(13)
There is a homemade sign hanging by a rope from a broken pillar.
Then get them a rope from a boxing store and offer a reward for the most consecutive jumps.
" Ward, do you ever worry you are siding with people who would have denied you a vote – or would hang you by a rope from a tree?
You know that centuries-old trick where an Indian fakir coaxes a rope from a basket and a small boy clambers to the top?
Shortly before midnight on Thursday, French troops with night-vision glasses abseiled down a rope from a helicopter into the Japanese residence.
I want to die being held, hearing my name thrown, thrown like a rope from a very old pier to hold me.
Similar(47)
On Tuesday morning, an elderly woman lowered a wicker basket tied to a rope from the second-floor window of a low-income apartment building in South Berkeley.
"They used a rope from the curtains.
Seven years before Yoshida's move to Paris, his exact contemporary, Kazuo Shiraga, a member of a group called Gutaï, had suspended himself by a rope from the ceiling of a gallery in Osaka and, dressed in a red Pinocchio suit, kicked paint around a sheet of paper lying on the floor.
He appeared on a rope from above, in a similar style to the Black Eyed Peas.
She is often also shown in peril: being chased, falling off a boat, or hanging by a rope from rafters.
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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