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Discover Ludwig"adumbrated" is a correct word in English
It means to provide a hint or suggestion of something, and it is used in formal contexts. For example: "The professor adumbrated the outline of the project but left the details to the students."
Exact(60)
The modest "efficiencies" adumbrated in the budget the growth in public spending is to be reduced to 0.7% from 2011, meaning reductions for some departments may not be sufficient to balance the books; but they are enough to change the politics of public expenditure.
Such a strategy may have been adumbrated in Mr Brown's speech, with its spending pledges and chest-beating eulogies to Labour and the NHS.
Mr Brown has been talking about generating up to 100,000 of them through accelerated infrastructure spending, a stimulus adumbrated in November's pre-budget report, along with the cut in value-added tax (VAT).
It was also at Münster that he wrote his first attempt at dogmatics, Die Lehre vom Worte Gottes; Prolegomena zur christlichen Dogmatik (1927; The Doctrine of the Word of God: Prolegomena to Church Dogmatics), in which his characteristic account of the Word of God, divine revelation, and the Trinity, Incarnation, and the Holy Spirit were clearly adumbrated.
Finally, under Pope Paschal II (1099 1118) the differentiation between the spiritual and the temporal-secular (regalia) aspects of the episcopal office, first adumbrated in the 1090s by the famous canon lawyer Bishop Ivo of Chartres, enabled the opposing parties to reach a compromise.
Rousseau's sentimental conception of the "noble savage" was often invoked, and often by those who were ignorant that the phrase is Dryden's or that the type was adumbrated in the "poor Indian" of Pope's An Essay on Man.
In another version of meaningfulness, first adumbrated by Schlick (under the influence of Wittgenstein), the philosopher's attention is focused on concepts rather than on propositions.
This "picture theory" of meaning, as it came to be called, was adumbrated by Russell and stated explicitly in the Tractatus.
Not since St. Augustine had so compelling a drama been adumbrated.
The idea of a postmortem purgatory had been adumbrated in the 1st and 2nd centuries bc in Jewish apocalyptic literature (I Enoch 22 9 13).
His musical wit is already recognised, and these sonatas were full of it, but what came across powerfully were his prophetic games with harmony: Wagner and even Shostakovich are at times adumbrated in Haydn's intricately protracted modulations.
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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