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Discover Ludwig"coils" is a correct and usable word in written English
"Coils" can refer to a round or spiral shape formed by a long, flexible material (such as wire or rope) wound around itself. It can also refer to a set of turns or spirals in a shape resembling a coil. Example: The old man carefully wound the fishing line around the small spool, creating neat, tight coils.
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Madeline Willis Doubtfully, the four of us look down at the coils of rope affectionately known as the snake pit; then up at the 90ft mast above our heads.
"The police had coils of barbed wire on their jeeps and drove them so near the protesters that the front row got cut.
I spent six weeks using an EMPpad Omnium1; a mat filled with electromagnetic coils that's attached to a tablet device.
But his body can't dissemble: it coughs at awkward questions, leans into interest, coils round a joke.
But even at three miles (5km) from the local telephone exchange, the speed of his broadband connection has inched up over the past few years from 65 kilobytes a second to more than 90 kilobytes a second as the local line has been tweaked and legacy equipment like echo-cancelling coils removed from its junction boxes.Sure, he could get 650 kilobytes a second or more from a cable connection.
Generators (roughly speaking) consist of magnets moving relative to coils.
Sprigs of mint, red coils of lotus root and bundles of knotted cabbage change hands for a few rupees, tossed from one boatman's lap to another.
The coils contain deionised water (to stop them from furring up like a kettle).
All participants used the helmet in their own homes.The device contains seven coils that deliver T-PEMF to brain tissues.
Fulton Innovation, another member of the Wireless Power Consortium and the eventual owner of Splashpower's assets, used the show to unveil a number of products including an in-car console equipped with inductive coils that can wirelessly charge mobile devices while on the road.
And the fields produced by gradient coils in a conventional MRI machine are not strong enough to pull on particles below about 250 micrometres in size, says Dr Martel, though an upgraded MRI system with more powerful coils could propel beads as small as 50 micrometres, he adds.
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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