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Discover LudwigThe phrase "afterwards stone" is not correct and does not make sense in written English.
It appears to be a fragment that lacks context and clarity, making it unusable in standard communication.
Example: "We will discuss the project details, and afterwards stone will be laid for the new building."
Alternatives: "subsequently" or "after that".
Exact(1)
Shortly afterwards, Stone became a mother, adopting a son, Roan, in 2000.
Similar(59)
Afterwards, piles of stone and soil were usually laid on top of the remains in order to create a tumulus.
Shortly afterwards is Beeston Stone Lock, also a listed structure, but dating from the construction of the canal and using conventional materials.
It stands on the site of a Norman motte and bailey castle, which was later rebuilt in stone in the 13th Century but fell into ruin after it suffered serious damage soon afterwards.
Afterwards, I slip into the stone hot tub, its water fed through an enormous shell held by a cheeky-looking statue of Pan (with a fish tail to cover his modesty).
"It was an absolute shock," she says afterwards, "I've lost eight stone and it's taken two years.
After a series of setbacks and delays, the project was finally scrapped after no worthy design was accepted, which resulted the foundation stone becoming the memorial afterwards.
I was very much surprised, now knowing from what such circumstances could arise: within a very short space of time afterwards, I was informed that a stone had fallen within 200 yards of me".
Soon afterwards a couple of Neolithic standing stones form a gateway to a field in the middle of nowhere.
The first stones were laid shortly afterwards, on 11 August 1093.
And afterwards, there was I, dressed in black, three stone underweight, looking almost terminally ill.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com