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Discover Ludwig"borne for" is not a correct or commonly used phrase in written English.
It does not make sense grammatically. A possible correct phrase could be "meant for" or "intended for." For example: "The dress was meant for a special occasion" or "The project was intended for a different team to handle."
Exact(21)
Thank you for validating the soft spot in my heart I have borne for Degrassi since eighth grade (Ben Neihart, March 20).
Terror is the warfare of the poor, and the traditional response to it causes unacceptable costs that cannot be borne for a long time.
In either case, the responsibility and the expense, probably near $1 billion, will be borne for the first time by a for-profit company, not a regulated utility.
"It could only be borne for a short time," the British journalist Harriet Martineau wrote in 1835 after viewing one storm over the Hudson, "this dazzling, bewildering alternation of glare and blackness, of vast reality and nothingness".
I want to thank all those who voted for me, and at the same time those who didn't, because they lifted from my soul a heavy burden I have borne for 10 years.
Off the main avenues the real day-to-day life of old Naples goes on with its picturesque qualities amid an increasingly desperate struggle with the terrible poverty the city has borne for centuries.
Similar(39)
UNDER AGE 10 -- A total bore for most.
AGES 3-10 A crushing bore for young children.
Mr. Lackey has studied Tahoe bears for 10 years.
What responsibility do writers bear for their work?
I cannot bear for another family to go through this".
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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