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Discover Ludwig"blurs with" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is used mainly to describe a gradual transition or merging of objects, ideas, feelings, or colors. Example sentence: "The bright orange of the setting sun blurs with the blue of the twilight sky."
Exact(15)
With the stadiums side by side, the end of one era blurs with the beginning of another.
Any wonder why virtual reality blurs with stark reality as fans leap the fences to be part of the action?
Their crutch — that their injuries were too burdensome — still stands, but the difference between fact and excuse blurs with each loss.
THE PLACE At the corner of East Broadway and Clinton Street, where Chinatown blurs with the Grand Street co-ops, Eastwood channels the area's historic charm.
Fiction blurs with reality, and there is geology and Romanticism, sightseeing and wine-tasting and much rumination on ageing and masculinity, relationships, love, fame and comedy itself.
Present blurs with past, life shades to death, and things unseen haunt the melancholy shadows, delicately cast, in this entrancing Paraguayan clearing.
Similar(42)
But the distinction has blurred with time.
This was the moment football blurred with pandemonium.
The Emperor's thoughts grew vinous and sentimental, his eyes blurring with drunken tears.
For anyone flipping through the newspaper in 2004, the case of Ibrahim Parlak probably blurred with others.
But to me, it's something different: an evolved form of marketing blurred with media.
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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