Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "accessible corner" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a location that is easy to reach or enter, often in the context of physical spaces or areas designed for convenience.
Example: "The new park features an accessible corner with ramps and seating for everyone to enjoy."
Alternatives: "easy-to-reach area" or "convenient spot".
Exact(3)
My own remedy is to stow a bag of semisweet chocolate bits in a not readily accessible corner of the freezer.
A person could bust. A. They place them in the least accessible corner of each store to make the customer walk through the place and expose them to more merchandise.
Tourists come to this increasingly accessible corner of China to see both — although most I spoke to said they had come for the landscape of towers, which looks uncannily like the ink-and-paper drawings that for centuries have presented a defining aspect of classical Chinese art.
Similar(57)
The membership is graying and dwindling at many of the surviving 29 churches, especially at those on the islands' least accessible corners.
"Anything that impairs the ability of someone to move on those accessible corners is a concern," said Marc A. Wurzel, general counsel to the partnership, which runs the business improvement district.
UIs have been designed for decades now with the mouse in mind; principles such as accessible corners, various consequences to do with mousedowns and mouseups, hover actions, cursor feedback and so on.
I'm far the only one who's wandered into those dark – but easily accessible – corners of the internet.
After talking with a gratified Ms. Rumsfeld on Wednesday, I was reminded of my own frustrations with how tax dollars are spent: parts of my block were essentially repaved three times in a year, due to a seeming lack of coordination among agencies, yet new handicapped-accessible corners are already coming loose.
The coming of the Beltway in the mid-1960s made Tysons Corner accessible to shoppers across the Potomac River in Maryland as well.
But in an age when the earth is Google-flat, its every corner accessible from an armchair, Tim Jeal's book is a reminder of just how tough, uncompromising and bitchy those Nile adventurers were.
One emergent use of social media is a new sort of leadership mind map, i.e., a model of the CEO's key ideas accessible to any corner of the organization.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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