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Discover Ludwig"act suddenly" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used when describing someone's behavior or actions that were unexpected or done without warning. Example: John was known for his calm and calculated demeanor, so when he suddenly acted impulsively and bought a puppy, his friends were shocked.
Exact(8)
Then there is the tacked-on third act suddenly that provides an incongruously happy resolution.
As the Affordable Care Act suddenly pushes business toward part-time employment, we economists will have an unusual opportunity to learn whether cutting employee hours creates jobs, or destroys them.
And, as health policy experts are very quick to point out, hitting 7 million enrollees isn't some magical benchmark, where the Affordable Care Act suddenly has the manpower to work.
Towards the end of a packed 90 minutes Helena Kennedy tells us that when the government was passing its excellent Children's Act, suddenly its officials realised what their own proposals meant.
So when the Nats act suddenly, as they did Tuesday by reaching an agreement with Patrick Corbin, the best free agent pitcher of this offseason, on what Yahoo Sports reports is a six-year, $140 million deal, the sport smacks its collective forehead with shock because it did not see the Nationals coming.
It was also a fantastic reveal at the end of the first act, suddenly realising that you've been accompanied by a fallen archangel.
Similar(52)
Between those two plays, Williams wrote a number of others, but none was so full of chlorophyll as his 1958 one-act "Suddenly Last Summer," now in a strong revival by the Roundabout Theatre Company (at the Laura Pels).
For many acts, suddenly there appears to be little difference between the illicit file-sharing system and record-label services.
In turn, random transitions predominated between 1985 and 1999, probably in response to economic factors that acted suddenly on the landscape during the 80's, such as the woodchip export and aquaculture booms.
Samuel Frith, 17 Adults seem to believe that once their bright, inquisitive, innocent child turns 13, it morphs into an antisocial, argumentative, Neanderthal-type who is only capable of selfish and stupid acts: suddenly, everything changes.
BBC Middle East correspondent Kevin Connolly says there has been no real pattern to the recent spate of attacks - the attackers appear to have acted suddenly, meaning there is no advance intelligence to forewarn the authorities.
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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