Your English writing platform
Discover Ludwig
No, "confronted from" is not a correct or commonly used phrase in written English. It is possible that the speaker intended to say "confronted with," which is a common phrase meaning to be faced with a difficult situation or problem. Example: The company was confronted with a major financial crisis, and had to make tough decisions to stay afloat.
Exact(13)
The artist's work, already known in Europe, confronted from a female perspective the conflict between tradition and modernity.
Transmitting the right message to constituencies who hear them differently is a problem the administration has confronted from the start of the crisis almost two weeks ago.
What seems certain is that those entrusted with the task of fulfilling the American mission were confronted, from the beginning, by an odds-against calculus.
But most specialists on counterterrorism and counterinsurgency, inside and outside the government, say terrorism cannot be confronted from a comfortable distance, such as by airstrikes or proxy forces alone.
They are confronting in the way we all get confronted from time to time when a trusted source tells us a home truth about some habit or behaviour we have behaved in perennially which is not good".
Labour's deputy leader was reportedly confronted from every direction by a number of Labour MPs angry that she appeared to rule out Woolas's hopes of standing again for Labour in an interview over the weekend, even though his appeal to overturn the court decision ruling his election void is still ongoing and Labour's disciplinary process has not concluded.
Similar(47)
They will need to be closer to all they confront from now on in.
Even so, broadcast television networks like Fox, part of the News Corporation, are performing well despite the competition they confront from alternative media like cable and the Internet.
Second, there are always more important things to confront – from rampant corporate power and escalating inequality to incessant war and the climate crisis.
The Syndicate is indicative of the nontraditional ideas being entertained by the Madison Avenue behemoths as they scramble to counter the competition they confront from entrepreneurial upstarts.
Mr. Schulze's letter was clearly aimed at addressing the problem he confronts from one of these statutes, the Minnesota business combination act, which is adopted word-for-word in the company's certificate of incorporation.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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