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Discover Ludwig"abrupt for" is not a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
If you would like to use a word that means "abruptly", you could use "abruptly" or "suddenly" instead. For example: John abruptly left the party without saying goodbye.
Exact(9)
I think it was very abrupt for people that he suddenly did this.
The end of that life was abrupt for Koehler, brought on by his flight from New York.
The move appeared unusually abrupt for a company like Schroders, which is family-controlled and likes to project a genteel upper-crust image.
The cancellation was rather abrupt for Mr. Carter, whose "X-Files" is often credited with helping make the Fox network prominent.
The economic reversal has been especially abrupt for victims like Denny Buck, 50, who made a six-figure salary working at Alcatel, the French telecommunications giant, which has announced about 1,400 layoffs here in the last four months.
Because demographic shifts have been abrupt for some groups, like the baby boomers — there are a lot more people over 55 now, and fewer people aged 35 to 54 — the charts look at changes in the employment-to-population ratio.
Similar(50)
Therefore, agomelatine seems to be at lower risk for discontinuation symptoms after abrupt tapering, for example in noncompliant patients.
It's been just over a month since York experienced its worst flooding for decades, bringing Christmas to an abrupt end for many.
It's an abrupt comedown for Craymer.
This was an abrupt reversal for the Chinese authorities.
The cutbacks are an abrupt turnaround for Mr. Kirshbaum.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com