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The phrase "all forgotten the" is not correct and does not make sense in written English.
It seems to be an incomplete thought and lacks proper context or structure for usage.
Example: "In the end, all forgotten the memories of our past."
Alternatives: "all memories lost" or "everything has been forgotten".
Exact(5)
It is a succinct reminder of why French charcuterie will be around long after we've all forgotten the name of Carla Bruni's husband.
"We all pass away sooner or later, leaving only a few memories behind for family, friends and humanity — and eventually we are all forgotten," the Web site reads.
Have we all forgotten the Breaking Point poster, the rise in hate crimes, Empire 2.0, Marine Le Pen celebrating the leave vote?
Whichever way this one pans out, at least we've all forgotten the scandal of the acres of empty seats at the fantabulous London Olympics.
By James Thurber and Leure Rosenbaum The New Yorker, February 3 , 1934P. 11 A member of the faculty of the Sarah Lawrence College tells about a family in Scaredale being awakened by firemen asking to use their phone, they had all forgotten the address of the place on fire.
Similar(55)
First of all, forget the cute stuff.
"As soon as the Games begin, we all forget the organisers and focus on the athletes".
It didn't take long before we all forgot the drizzle.
How, above all, have we all but forgotten the Winter Queen?
But they appear to have all but forgotten the country.
I have all but forgotten the League Two promotion under Paul Sturrock.
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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