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Discover Ludwig"common admonition" is correct and usable in written English.
It is usually used to suggest a warning or caution in the form of advice or a reminder. For example, "Heeding this common admonition, I decided not to take the shortcut home."
Exact(4)
On the spending side, the common admonition is "cut, cut, cut," with little regard to the short-term impact on demand or the long-term impact on innovation and productivity growth.
One may wonder how this misconception is reconciled with the common admonition by medical doctors to complete each course of treatment with antibiotics even after symptoms disappear would this not provide more opportunities for bacteria to "develop" resistance by prolonging exposure?
'Do maar gewoon, dan doe je al gek genoeg'ActAct normal, because that's weird enough') is a common admonition.
It's a common admonition in the church when discussing sin that the pain we keep hidden will fester, that only light can drive out darkness.
Similar(56)
Even today, one of the most common admonitions of federal judges in courts is that they can recommend a prison or a program or a course of therapy for a convict, but they cannot overrule the mighty federal Bureau of Prisons.
Fortunately, a variety of common procedural admonitions mitigate these concerns.
In the real climate system, the given graph was true in the relatively short period of the 1980s-90s, the producers have failed to follow their own admonition to avoid the "common mistake when interpreting statistics — look[ing] at them from too short a distance".
Pinter's plays, on the other hand, offered no exhortations, no admonitions, no solutions, no common ground among people.
"Nothing to be done": the first words of "Waiting for Godot" announce both the characters' existential impasse and the author's aesthetic attack — no context, no exposition, no admonitions, no answers, no common ground.
"Nothing to be done": the first words of "Waiting for Godot" announce both the characters' existential impasse and the author's aesthetic attack no context, no exposition, no admonitions, no answers, no common ground.
The Court, to be sure, does refer to the admonition in Metro-North that common-law rules must be adopted to avoid the risk of unlimited and unpredictable liability. Id., at 433 (quoting Gottshall, 512 U. S. at 557).
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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