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The phrase 'abrupt in' is not correct and cannot be used in written English.
If you want to describe something that has occurred quickly and unexpectedly, you can use the phrase 'abruptly.' For example, "Bill abruptly ended the meeting before anyone could ask questions."
Exact(59)
We learned that we were too abrupt in that transition".
Ftorek was abrupt in his postgame remarks, stalking off after a few comments.
The later hour wakes up some people, who are abrupt in their dismissal.
AHCT is proud of its "core synonym" feature for abrupt, in the sense of "rudely informal".
Last Exit is both ultra-realistic and abrupt in a stream-of- consciousness, lagrantly ungrammatical style.
"He was short tempered and abrupt in his reactions sometimes," Mr. Eissa said.
Xi's rise had been so abrupt, in the eyes of the general public, that people joked, "Who is Xi Jinping?
In Light, we get not one but two love stories, both intense, continental in extent and abrupt in their termination.
Williams is even more abrupt in his playing and more willing to perform duets with the soloists, leaving the keeping of time to the bassist.
Second, the long memory of groundwater systems in drylands also means that abrupt (in geological terms) changes in recharge or widely distributed groundwater abstraction will leave longer legacies.
Similar(1)
The smooth-in-time model used by Coles and Sparks (2006) and Deligne et al. (2010) is also sensitive to timing errors, while the abrupt-in-time model used by Furlan (2010) and Mead and Magill (2014) is insensitive to timing errors, as is our model (because we bin the times into intervals).
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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