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Discover Ludwig"conflation in" is a valid phrase that can be used in written English.
It is typically used to refer to something being mixed or blended together. For example, "Her speech highlighted the conflation in different cultures and beliefs."
Exact(12)
"There is a deep conflation in public health between the drug nicotine and the harm caused by smoking.
Many critics have pointed out the conflation, in Rinehart's political arguments, of what she insists is the national interest with her own commercial interests.
There is a big conflation in Egypt, even among intellectuals, about what the National Library is about, let alone the Archives.
The final item consisted of extracts from Romeo and Juliet - a conflation, in fact, of the first two orchestral suites which Prokofiev prepared before the ballet's 1940 premiere.
But it also exposed the growing conflation in the anti-choice community of birth control with abortion – and the efforts to restrict access not just to the latter, but also to the former.
Inadvertently the author assisted in the conflation; in its April 26 , 1943 issue, Time reported that he had "last fortnight left the U.S. for active service against the Axis in Africa".
Similar(45)
"There's no reason I need to do conflations in my head when we can sense when I should plant my tomatoes.
"Bannon... coined the Jarvanka conflation now in ever greater use," Wolff writes in the chapter titled "Jarvanka".
And this conflation, which in short order blames all Jews for the actions of a state to which many owe no allegiance, is the high road to anti-Semitism.Second, the comparison is absurd.
At best, this conflation results in a failure to identify human trafficking, forced labour and slavery, but at worst it creates the perfect conditions for all three to take root.
As these are distinct thoughts, there is no conflation: even in the presence of the threat (or, more generally, any intuitively wrong kind of reason for an attitude), I don't find the attitude itself an appropriate or rational response.
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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