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Discover LudwigThe phrase "address quite" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to express a degree of addressing something, but it lacks clarity and context.
Example: "We need to address quite a few issues in the meeting."
Alternatives: "address several" or "address many".
Exact(8)
He found out her address quite easily, by telephoning the conference organisers.
She does not use a digital camera and does not have a computer or an e-mail address — quite an impediment to getting work, even secretarial work.
The socket interface makes the size of an IP address quite visible to an application; virtually all TCP/IP applications for BSD-based systems have the knowledge of the size of an IP address.
Oh, and by the way, Castro managed to address quite a range of issues — immigration, the Russia investigation, the Justice Department, human rights, foreign relations and other stuff — during his simultaneous "live" appearances.
One of the things we'll have to address, quite soon, are the very practical issues like heating and the furniture literally wearing out.
The Massachusetts cases, which address quite distinct questions about marriage from the case decided by Judge Walker, may well reach the Supreme Court first and how the Court approaches the DOMA cases may re-shape the political and legal landscape against which this California case is ultimately resolved.
Similar(52)
I do sometimes marvel at the beauty industry's ability to invent new product categories for problems already addressed quite adequately without them, and lip scrubs are a case in point.
Virtually every song, and much of the scattered "book" too, addresses quite specifically an attitude or an experience of the here and now, which is to say the there-and-then: draft dodging, fads like astrology and be-ins, free love, newfangled drugs, the Hare Krishna movement.
The product addresses quite possibly the biggest ongoing issue with Bluetooth earbuds: battery life.
That's neither here nor there and was addressed quite nicely by David Pogue in the Times, so I'll cede to his eloquence on that point.
A lot of times people come to Silicon Valley and have those same issues, so it's not something that can't be addressed quite quickly.
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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