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Discover Ludwig'bustling place' is an acceptable phrase in written English.
It is often used to refer to a physical place that is lively and active with people, such as a city center, market or shopping district. For example: "The market square was a bustling place, full of energy and excitement."
Exact(56)
Main Street is a bustling place.
It is not the bustling place it was in earlier years.
At any time of day, the agency is a bustling place.
Mussina has long expressed doubts about playing in a bustling place like New York.
The crowd in this bustling place seems to be a mix of regulars, who do not need menus, and beachgoers.
At K. B. Garden, a vast, bright bustling place that by day is a dim sum parlor, the food is superbly simple.
Ann Gray, 84, remembers the center of Sparkill as a bustling place during the years she grew up on Rockland Road.
Similar(4)
A lot of people I meet see the decline of previously bustling places as something beyond economics and more like a moral affront, routinely describing it as "disgraceful", "awful" and that great British commonplace "disgusting".
Its cities are diverse, bustling places filled with Internet cafes, fashionably dressed women, youths with punk attire and neon hair, and opinionated cabdrivers eager to tick off the Communist Party's foibles.
Noisy crowds or bustling places are not her favorites.
During the festival, it becomes the bustling Place Desjardins, with a snow palace, a sugar shack offering maple syrup treats and a children's area with games, an ice maze and live entertainment.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com