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Discover Ludwig"chimney smoke" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is typically used to describe the smoke that comes out of a chimney, often in a rural or traditional setting. Example: The quaint cottage was surrounded by the scent of wood-burning fires and the sight of chimney smoke rising into the crisp autumn air.
Exact(14)
Pell discerned a bloom of chimney smoke, faint as a watermark against the white sky.
Chimney smoke wafted from the town of Arsal in the valley below.
But it isn't Enron's stance on bickering or chimney smoke that seems to be attracting so much interest.
Their fragrances can be layered, delicate, even appetizing concoctions that blend, say, tulips, chimney smoke, dried vines and a brick wall (see Tisane by Tatine's St. John's Wood).
His interest in bubbles was genuine, but the truth is that almost anything could have caught Copaken's eye: pop songs, movies, the movement of chimney smoke.
Once home to so many "bottle-oven" brick kilns that the streets were clogged with the fug of chimney smoke, Longton now fights urban decay.
Similar(46)
"He had been stuck on chimneys, smoke stacks, lightning rods and church spires, and he had been dragged through rivers, lakes, and over garden plots and forests primeval.
Their cottages, which they often shared with their animals, usually lacked chimneys; smoke from smoldering peat fires inside seeped out through thatched roofs.
Chimney-smoke and soot to rise?
For one thing, it was reported the chimneys smoked so much that the fires had to be allowed to die down, and consequently the court shivered in icy magnificence.
The metaphorical cigarette Sid smoked could be one more industrial chimney spewing smoke, one more coral reef decimated, or a steady rise in average global temperature.
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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