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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a year pass" is not a complete sentence and is not grammatically correct.
It is missing a subject and a verb. It could potentially be used as a noun phrase, but it would need to be part of a larger sentence to make sense. For example: - "A year pass to the museum is on sale for $50." - "I can't believe how quickly a year passed." - "In just a year's time, the landscape of the city had completely changed."
Exact(17)
More than 10 million people a year pass it.
Smuggled goods worth perhaps $200m a year pass through Ilave; local officials squabble over rake-offs.
At Network Rail's busiest station, Liverpool Street, 140m passengers a year pass through every year, more than twice the UK's population.
An Amex spokeswoman says it will be charged "once existing cardholders who haven't used it for more than a year pass their card 'anniversary'anniversary
Now let a year pass, and suppose none of project F's variables changes except for t, which is now one year instead of two.
An Amex spokeswoman said the fee would be charged "once existing cardholders who haven't used [the account] for more than a year pass their card 'anniversary'".
Similar(43)
A year passes.
But then more than a year passed.
A year passed before I made it back to Treece.
A year passed, and the couple grew inseparable.
But a year passed, then another, and no word came.
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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