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The phrase "able to vouch that" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to express that you can confirm or support the truth of something based on your knowledge or experience.
Example: "I am able to vouch that the information provided in the report is accurate and reliable."
Alternatives: "can attest that" or "can confirm that".
Exact(2)
Being a woman who has watched The Revenant also means I'm in the exciting position of being able to vouch that it is safe for my sex.
These former "terrorists" will have the legacy as volunteers who "went there and did it" and will be able to vouch that the experience of joining the caliphate wasn't like the vision presented in slick videos on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.
Similar(58)
But … as O'Sullivan himself notes, "Mark's the toughest competitor on tour", and anyone who was fortunate enough to catch Selby's staggeringly good semi-final with Neil Robertson will probably be able to vouch for that.
Consolidated Freightways has been losing money for seven consecutive quarters and is one of the few companies that was not able to vouch for the accuracy of its financial results last month, as requested by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The one part of the EU's accounts that the Court of Auditors did feel able to vouch for was "administrative expenditure".
By whatever authority we are able to vouch for the non-tactile nature of yellowness, the color-touchers affirm that silftness is not of a visual nature.
"But everyone recognizes that for an investigation to be credible, others have to be able to vouch for the results".
Jenny Griffiths was able to vouch for the importance of grants.
If life is a series of key moments, Samardzija may be able to vouch for it.
An expert may not be able to vouch for the accuracy of the information on a given page, said Mr. Daly, the former F.B.I. investigator, but he can testify that a reconstructed document "was at one time one piece of paper that was cut into little pieces of paper, and now it's back into one piece of paper".
Surely, no... isn't that Leonardo's Salvator Mundi, the world's most expensive painting, which was bought for $450 million by a Saudi prince and promptly disappeared from the face of the earth, with no one able to vouch for its condition?
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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