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Discover LudwigThe phrase "convey charm" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means to communicate or express a sense of attractiveness or charisma. Example: The way she speaks and carries herself conveys charm and captivates everyone in the room.
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Norman Tebbit has a face for radio, and some uglier views, but he manages to convey charm, sincerity and a lot more gravitas than Nigel ("Mine's a pint") Farage.
Jansson's sympathy for all and sundry comes out partly in this inclusiveness, and partly in the illustrations, which convey charm and vulnerability in characters that might repel in the text.
Parenti and Dermody are an alluring pair who are radiant in an organic and unprepossessing way; to convey charm they don't need to twinkle their eyes or put too fine a point on it.
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In Hollywood movies, Boyer was able to convey Gallic charm without being a cartoon Frenchman.
However, you reckon that Capaldi "struggles to convey the charm we are assured Mandelson and Campbell can turn on when they want to".
Reviewing "Village School" in The New York Times Book Review in 1956, Mary Ellen Chase, a novelist and Hardy scholar, wrote: "It is difficult to convey the charm and grace of this book.
Stanton Burnett, director of studies at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies, objects to quantification because "it conveys the charm of competence". He meant that numbers tend to dazzle the beholder, obscuring the often-fuzzy assumptions on which they are based.
But, although he was capable of adapting his gifts to the screen to play sly or sinister characters, it was on stage that his capacity for conveying drawling charm and insolent mockery shone brightest.
He, in turn, can convey a soulful charm and an Oriental, bardic atmosphere with the freedom and delicacy of his playing.
Indeed, despite the puissance suggested by the male hero's name, "Samson" is a work of quivering vulnerability, easily crushed by performers who do not understand or cannot convey its period charm.
But Losey's strongest critique of the times emerges in his wide-screen, black-and-white images, which convey the superficial charms of conventional society, the reproachful serenity of the sea and the sky, and the despairing humanism of modernistic sculpture — and do so with a unique stylistic flourish.
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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