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Discover Ludwig"adulterated with" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to contaminate or make impure by adding something to it. Here's an example: "The water tested positive for high levels of lead, indicating that it had been adulterated with harmful chemicals."
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Beside this, in 2012, Chanda et al. found that all fifty milk samples collected from Barisal district of Bangladesh were adulterated with water and more interestingly, 10%% of those samples were adulterated with toxic formalin and 20%% with sodium bicarbonate.
The challenges involved in the use of NIR in tracking fuel adulteration is intensified in a typical practice where diesel oil is adulterated with about 10 30% of kerosene.
Other investigations have uncovered supplements adulterated with steroid hormones.
Perhaps inevitably, ecstasy pills became adulterated with other substances.
The True Teaching - not the True Teaching adulterated with human opinion - however refined and sublime.
Typically, Italian oils are adulterated with cheaper and inferior imports from Spain, Greece, Morocco and Tunisia.
"It has been adulterated with tricks, flashes and almost Disney-like choreography," Ms. Willis-Aarnio said.
As mentioned before, ginseng is often adulterated with codonopsis to reduce manufacturing costs.
It was a bucolic 18th century scene adulterated with schoolboy graffiti.
However, similarly with Ecstasy in its pill form, Molly is often adulterated with methylone.
A huge pet-food recall in the United States was traced to Chinese animal feed adulterated with melamine.
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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