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Discover Ludwig'chapter title' is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to refer to the heading or title of a particular chapter in a book, magazine, or other form of text. For example, "In Chapter 4, 'A New Adventure', the characters set out on their journey."
Exact(57)
A sociological discussion is given a soap-opera chapter title.
Enter the sheep professor, as the chapter title says.
Sample chapter title: "This Is Going to Be Offal".
A chapter title, "Variations on a Constant Theme", describes the whole book well.
(The chapter title and Price's tone bring 9/11 to mind).
Take the following chapter title from a 1994 book: "Something Resists: Reading-Deconstruction as Ontological Infestation".
One lesson Gingrich claimed to learn the hard way was, as a chapter title has it, "Don't Underestimate the Liberals".
Perhaps this is because the gloss of "hope" (the chapter title Decade gives to 2009) already seems slightly dulled.
Similar(3)
For his first feature, Glanz borrows liberally from Anderson: from Larry Pine's story-time narration to the book-chapter title cards, to Ben Kutchins' symmetrical photography, to archaic props like typewriters, rotary phones, tape recorders and Vespas.
For thesis and dissertations, the conventional format for page numbers is in a column to the right of each section/chapter title.
3. R. Davis, J. King, "[Chapter title goes here]" in Machine Intelligence, E. Acock, D. Michie, Eds.
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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