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Discover Ludwig"creates unease" is a perfectly correct and usable phrase in written English
You can use it to describe a feeling or atmosphere that is uncomfortable, unsettling, or worrying. For example, "The dark clouds gathering on the horizon created an unease among the crowd."
Exact(5)
"It creates unease".
However, the strategy is risky because it creates unease in an auditorium.
This creates unease within the group – and we may only call it a group at a stretch.
Only once, in the Fifth Symphony, from 1937, does he present a classically Beethovenian, through-strife-to-the-stars narrative, and even then the cold magnificence of the finale creates unease.
Chinese medicine is also hugely influential, too, if only subconsciously, and its basis in non-invasive treatment creates unease around putting a foreign object into the body, for hours at a time.
Similar(55)
"That created unease and suspicion".
Of course, rapid cuts can create unease: what are they hiding?
But activism has been stirring, creating unease in Beijing and among local oligarch business interests.
The owners of these companies say the valuations make them giddy, but also create unease.
These forces create unease because they could easily interdict shipments of Caspian oil and gas.
Though the interview upholds Peltier's claims, it seems to create unease among Peltier's supporters.
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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