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The phrase "aggressive case that" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe a strong or forceful argument or situation, but it lacks clarity and context.
Example: "In the debate, she presented an aggressive case that the policy would lead to significant economic benefits."
Alternatives: "strong argument that" or "forceful case that".
Exact(2)
But Mr. Santorum has been able to press a still more aggressive case that Mr. Romney has ceded the Tea Party's antigovernment position through his health care plan, among other policies he pushed while governor of Massachusetts.
Mr. Obama and his allies are testing the proposition that they can avoid tripping over the line into a full-tilt attack on the wealthy and still make an aggressive case that Mr. Romney's success came at the expense of American workers and that the Republican Party is doing the bidding of its wealthy benefactors.
Similar(58)
Oncologists who treat prostate cancer have long been frustrated by a quagmire: They know they treat many men whose disease won't harm them, but at the same time they fail to catch aggressive cases that kill.
— KIM SEVERSON Rick Santorum may have just made his clearest, most aggressive case yet that he — not Mr. Romney or Mr. Gingrich — should be the nominee.
When he took office last year, the attorney general pledged that as a first step toward restoring confidence in the government he planned aggressive prosecutions of cases that involved high officials.
A decade ago the Defense Intelligence Agency was among the most aggressive in pressing the case that Iraq had an active nuclear weapons program.
They've become more aggressive in making the case that governance is hard and you've got to know how things fit together.
In response, Democratic lawmakers have made an aggressive and often-exasperated case that infanticide is already illegal and that the "born alive" bills are a stalking horse for more-thorough abortion restrictions.
Last month, in his second Inaugural Address, Mr. Obama made an aggressive case for a liberal agenda that included having greater tolerance toward immigrants, advancing gay rights, preserving the social safety system and confronting climate change.
The auto industry is pivotal to that effort, and Mr. Obama will surely continue to make the case that without his aggressive moves to save General Motors, for instance, the American automobile industry would be in far more dire straits.
What had begun more than three years earlier as a wide-ranging inquiry into the financing of Mr. Torricelli's 1996 campaign had narrowed to what prosecutors hoped would be a more compelling case: that an ambitious, aggressive politician took tens of thousands of dollars in unreported gifts and cash from a wealthy contributor.
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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