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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a speechmaker even" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize the unexpectedness or surprise of someone being a speechmaker, often in a context where it contrasts with other characteristics or roles of the person.
Example: "He was known for his quiet demeanor, but he turned out to be a speechmaker even at the most formal events."
Alternatives: "a speaker even" or "a public speaker even".
Exact(1)
He became a speechmaker even in print.
Similar(59)
Meanwhile, despite popular rejection of his philosophy, he shows no sign of unease about making large amounts of money as an international relations adviser, speechmaker and even a "peace envoy" in the Middle East.
Mr. Obama, who rose to prominence on his power as a speechmaker, has discussed his Inaugural Address with a certain detachment.
But even in the few brief remarks he made on the subject, Mr. Giuliani made it clear that he envisioned doing something more than taking on the more traditional elder-statesman role of adding his name and prestige to an existing company and becoming a speechmaker, a rainmaker or a lobbyist.
Mr. Obama's aides say he will seek to connect with voters and debunk the "just a speechmaker" rap against him, with intimate appearances in voters' homes and workplaces.
Though he was considered as persuasive a speechmaker as he had been a pastor, Mr. Huckabee largely kept his own counsel — in politics, ethics and a singular clemency policy that continues to haunt him.
This is a movie about a community organizer, a speechmaker, a politician who took it upon himself not only to "recruit" whomever he was talking to (as he frequently put it), but also to instruct them.
By James Surowiecki October 16, 2008 One of the reasons John McCain isn't especially successful as a debater, or as a speechmaker, is that he often discusses issues by using inside-the-Beltway shorthand, a shorthand that's completely baffling to anyone who doesn't already know what he's talking about — which is say, completely baffling to almost all American voters.
Her blend of documentary-style plainness and arch ellipsis is the style of the moment; it's the style of Michael Haneke, André Téchiné, Andrea Arnold, and many others, for whom the stance of providing an objective reality conflicts with the desire to convey messages with a speechmaker's hectoring insistence.
She delivered it well, but Clinton has always been more of a policy wonk than a speechmaker.
And he's genuinely obsessed with Ms Kearns Goodwin's book, which recalls how Lincoln, after winning the 1860 Republican presidential nomination in an upset (Lincoln was better known as a speechmaker-for-hire than a leader), hired his better-known political foes for his cabinet.
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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