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Discover Ludwig"blots of ink" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is a phrase that describes a quantity or collection of ink blots. Example: The page was covered in blots of ink, making it difficult to read the words written underneath.
Exact(3)
I used to spill vast blots of ink, all the time.
This is a contest that requires some research — looking through newspaper articles — and rewards those who do a lot of it (Duncan Stevens, I'm looking at your six blots of ink).
(Even without seeing the writers' names when I judged, I kind of guessed that all of these were all from the same Loser). This week Frank scores his seventeenth Invite win, for 348 blots of ink in all, and he didn't even start Inviting since December 2012.
Similar(57)
A blot of ink creating its own ink to write a story?
Black and ragged at the edges, the stain on the passenger window of Khasukha Demilkhanov's Volga saloon looks like a huge blot of ink.
"A blot of ink fiddled down on a piano", "green virtue", and "an automobile paved with therefore" seem to be examples of incomprehensible nonsense, whereas "the round square" is inconsistent but still comprehensible.
"They're like little blobs of ink, gold ink.
While some strokes are meant to be thick and others thin, blots or spurts of ink mean that your nib is not flush with the page and needs to be shaped.
But at the vast majority of newly public dot-coms, the blot of red ink continued to spread.
This governor is as transparent as a blot of India ink.
After they voted, by circling a name on the ballot, an official marked the index finger of their left hands with a blot of indelible ink.
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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