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Discover Ludwig"concerned being" is not grammatically correct and it is not a phrase that is typically used in written English.
If you are trying to express that someone is worried or concerned about something, you could say "a concerned person" or "a person who is concerned" or something similar. Example: The concerned person looked over the paperwork to make sure everything was in order.
Exact(18)
This much, though, was clear: as far as the attendees were concerned, being German is a great thing once again.
"Personally, I would be concerned being on a service knowing that everybody can listen to my conversations," he says.
As far as avoiding antisemitism is concerned, being merely and meekly Jew-ish doesn't help at all.
They have access to look at tax returns without the party concerned being informed, and to search back through previous years as well.
The trick, in all aforementioned cases, seems to be to subsume the latent conflict within a broader system of alliances, the major one for all countries concerned being the European Union.
This is what regulates breathing, digestion, blood-sugar levels, temperature, pancreatic function, immune responses to germs and so on, automatically and without the people concerned being conscious of these processes.
Similar(42)
How concerned are you?
What is concerning is the defensive personnel.
However, insofar as the user of the term is concerned, 'being' can be contracted to one of the categories, for when one says 'being in itself,' one intends to signify substance, even though in the order of reality no such contraction occurs.
Such concerns are receding.
Some concerns are justified.
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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