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The phrase "again counted on" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when expressing reliance or trust in someone or something that has been relied upon before.
Example: "After his previous success, he was again counted on to lead the project."
Alternatives: "relied on again" or "depended on once more".
Exact(1)
Our work as carers is again counted on, but never counted.
Similar(59)
And Ahmadinejad is again counting on his populist appeal.
And no leader here can ever again count on a compliant, docile population.
Determined to never again count on someone else's business for his living, he founded his own.
Governor Bush is considered the favorite in North Dakota and Virginia because he is once again counting on the local Republican establishment.
Now Ms. McCarthy is again counting on the loft to come to her rescue; in an effort to pay tuition bills and live mortgage-free, she put it on the market for $2 million a few weeks ago.
There was a period a few years ago, early in the history of the now-disbanded UK Film Council, when it looked doubtful that innovative or left-field film-makers could ever again count on getting a firm foothold in the British cinema scene.
Nevertheless, it is these same relationships that First Data is once again counting on to make eOne a success.
That's a good feeling, to be counted on again".
Epstein acknowledges that this run of luck cannot be counted on again.
Unsung, stacked, piled against a wall, or hidden in closets, folding chairs will be counted on again since, plastic palace people, they're both transience and ritual.
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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