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Discover LudwigThe phrase "an expression of want" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing desires, needs, or requests in various contexts, such as psychology, communication, or personal reflection.
Example: "Her letter was an expression of want, revealing her deep longing for connection and understanding."
Alternatives: "a demonstration of desire" or "a manifestation of need."
Exact(1)
Gently the aria sinks into an oblivion, a void that is not an expression of want or death, but rather of well-being and light.
Similar(59)
Production is an expression of wants.
"There is no wording regarding any threat nor any expression of wanting to cause harm to anyone at the school," police said Tuesday in a statement, describing the journal's content.
That's an expression of "not wanting to be seen".
Decor is, after all, an expression of what you want your dwelling space to be, and, by proxy, what you want to spend your time doing and thinking about.
I, however, can't help but feel that the tendency to jump on the "but some people do feel that way" when it doesn't come either from someone who does or at least with more nuance relating to the critique it's aimed at is just an expression of how people want to view disability, rather than a way to respect the fact that different disabled people perceive their lives in many ways.
"Any time our players have an expression of faith and wanting to honor two members of the football program, I'm 100 percent behind them," he said.
"It's an expression of kids looking beyond, wanting different answers, wanting to feel apart from the dominant culture here, which is pretty serious, upper middle class and driven," he says.
Most pundits and other self-appointed experts took that to mean she will run for governor — probably more an expression of the fight they want to watch than of whatever Ms. Davis might be thinking.
A young adult's failed attempt at "suicide-by-jaguar" can be read as a Szymborska-esque victory over death, a Wittgensteinian attempt to learn what one truly is and a Dostoevskian expression of wanting over reason.
"People are allowed to take from it what they want — an expression of a higher power, or God or just the Big Brother element that we all feel in our lives," Ms. Blunt said.
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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