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Discover LudwigThe phrase "assuage you" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when you want to express the act of calming or alleviating someone's feelings or concerns.
Example: "I hope this explanation will assuage you and put your mind at ease."
Alternatives: "ease your mind" or "calm you down".
Exact(4)
Among the words we had to put into sentences were "collusion," "malign," "quagmire," "mettle," "malingerer," "befuddled," "flout" and "assuage". You get the idea.
Just long enough for them to take a seemingly real, honest consideration of what you are saying before trying to assuage you.
When did I first decide to smile, laugh or make noises in bed when I didn't feel any of it for real, to flatter or assuage you or persuade you to leave me alone?
Nowadays, there are virtual places where you can confess -- about not recycling or for having premarital sex (different sites), but I am suggesting a HuffPost confessional right here and now, to assuage you from last week's transfat snack or genital Xerox copies at work.
Similar(56)
Watts told me that she loved the "emotional wallop" of the reading, and said her doubts about Buttons had been assuaged: "When you make a movie with Ben Stiller, you have to trust his sense of what's funny".
But such doubts are easily assuaged if you're in touch with your inner teenage delinquent, as Dr. Gergely seems to be.
The sense that the new world has its roots in the now and is never very far away creates a feeling of threat that is not assuaged when you discover the chain of events that have destroyed much of the world as we would recognise it.
Go fuck yourself!" None the less, any concerns that the fight has gone out of Liam are quickly assuaged when you see Beady Eye live, the second treat that the idea of the band promised – partly because any audience chanting Liam's name was always going to be prone to feistiness itself.
With breaches at Equifax, Experian, and Deloitte fresh in today's headlines, Security and IT professionals are deeply engaged with the most important kind of self-examination, "could this happen to me?" Before you assuage yourself with rationalizations of how this couldn't possibly happen to you, let me assure you, it could and it might.
If you assuage your guilt by performing self-recrimination for an audience, you might as well be Mark Zuckerberg freezing his skull off to save a hundred bucks.
If you're watching this film and waiting for something funny or insightful to come along to assuage your annoyance, you'll wait a long time.
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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