Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(2)
Exact(5)
It's so complicated…" At exactly this point the publicist appears to wind up the interview.
His unorthodox mechanics — his body appears to wind up tightly, and then suddenly, uncoil — are part of why he is nicknamed "The Freak".
When, halfway through the season, Vivien's little dog appears to wind up in the microwave, the scene packs all of the punch of that scene from "Three's Company" in which Chrissy mistakenly eats Jack's contest-bound chocolate pie.
The Bush administration's decision to abrogate the 1972 Antiballistic Missile Treaty with Russia will increase European concerns about American unilateralism re-emerging as the war in Afghanistan appears to wind down, senior European officials said today.
Small wonder that every woman whose path he crosses appears to wind up a little in love with him, including two secretaries, affectingly embodied by Pandora Colin (pinched and resentful as the plain one) and Emily Barber (an instinctive, confident charmer as the pretty one).
Similar(53)
When a man appeared to wind up to throw a punch, Mr. Curtis lunged, he said.
We walked past a drained swimming pool and a little park decorated with statues of stone monkeys and lions to a paved lane that appeared to wind its way to the top of Komugi Mountain, which, it turned out, was hardly a mountain at all; it had an elevation of just a few hundred feet.
Rick Perry tried claiming that as president he'd zero-base budget all foreign aid and then ran into the Israel buzz saw, exempted "strategic aid in all forms" and appeared to wind up saying that he would take a hard-eyed look at any spending overseas that involved aid to hungry children.
6 49 p.m.: Updated with the march appearing to wind down. .
When viewed with a magnifying glass, the "hairs" (fungal hyphae) making up the outer velvety surface are variable in length, and are thick-walled, blunt, and appear to wind from side to side (flexuous).
The twist appears to be winding down, though, because "the Fed has replaced $667 billion in short-term Treasuries on its balance sheet with an equivalent amount in longer-term Treasures" since September 2011, according to "A Citizen's Guide to Unconventional Monetary Policy," a report by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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