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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as evoking" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing something that brings to mind or calls forth a particular feeling, image, or memory.
Example: "The painting is rich in color, as evoking a sense of nostalgia for simpler times."
Alternatives: "as conjuring" or "as suggesting".
Exact(28)
His mobiles are commonly described as evoking a childlike joy in the viewer.
Blanca and Dorit, both also students of Jehan's, describe Jehan's choreography as spiritual, as evoking ancient rhythms.
This particular collection is inspired by the grungy Dalston-girl aesthetic, as well as evoking a more traditional British mood with the use of tartan and rose print".
As well as evoking the sense of space its title invites, the album pays direct tributes to jazz-piano and vibrant blues.
In last year's "Suspended Women," which she describes as evoking "the vulnerability of women," Ms. Buglisi has created a stage full of mysterious Everywomen.
Nailing down the differences between the respective stances of the Hunger Strike Headquarters, the Beijing Students' Federation, and the Provincial Students Federationn is as important to him as evoking the scent of Dai Wei's girlfriends.
Similar(28)
Somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) are measured on the scalp as evoked EEG responses to an electrical stimulus applied typically to the median or tibial nerves.
Extremely heartening, as evoked by Croall, are Gielgud's happy relationships with any number of leading and lesser actors, especially Ralph Richardson.
The Burberry diaspora, as evoked by testimonial letters sent to the company, mirrored Britain's: Salonika, Ceylon, Burma, Formosa, Constantinople, Borneo, the Orange Free State.
This, I think, is why ghost cities, dark urban twins, the towns that come out when the workaday world goes to bed – as evoked by writers such as Neil Gaiman, China Miéville, and Frances Hardinge – are particularly appealing to younger readers.
Jissô, meaning "reality," is that which is named, intended, meant, as evoked by sho becoming ji.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com