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Discover LudwigThe phrase "across by" is not correct or usable in written English
A phrase such as "across from" or "next to" would be more appropriate and correct. For example: The convenience store is located across from the library.
Exact(58)
That was a view put across by many survey respondents.
Trucks and other heavy items are brought across by barge.
What the rubberneckers loved was the Queen's Rolls Royce Phantom V1, brought across by car ferry.
After all, there is an educational message to be put across by the Turner prize.
There is also the occasional bridge-phobic commuter, who needs his or her car driven across by an expert.
The words are missing, but the message gets across by means of contrasting textures, intensities, speeds, styles of presentation.
Gupta's breezy colloquialism observes the spirit rather than the letter of the text, and is lustily put across by a versatile, multi-ethnic cast.
Despite an eloquent and thoughtful case for the defence put across by Solbakken post-match, his departure hardly comes as a surprise.
With sales slow, dealers have been trying to get the point across by filling the XUV with mountains of sodas, landscaping materials and wide-screen TV boxes.
Glucose and other necessary substances are shuttled across by specific carrier systems.
While that's a lot of money to come across by chance, Wilman isn't the only person to have struck it rich on ambergris recently.
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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