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Discover Ludwig"crossed it out" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is typically used when describing an action of physically or digitally crossing out or deleting something in a written text or document. Example: "I accidentally wrote the wrong date on my paper, so I crossed it out and wrote the correct one next to it."
Exact(21)
But someone had crossed it out and written "Resident".
(He instinctively wrote "no return to boom and bust", but crossed it out).
"He wrote Linclon, then crossed it out and signed it correctly.
"Mahler put the direction in the score, then he crossed it out," Mr. Kaplan said.
"I've always crossed it out," said one arts lawyer who declined to be identified, "and no one has ever objected".
In the manuscript, she found that almost everywhere the auxiliary verb "may" appeared Stein had crossed it out and put in the word "can".
Similar(39)
She also wrote, before crossing it out, "I will not see my grandchildren grow up and that causes me pain".
Mr. Epstein said he finds himself filling a whole page, and the next day crossing it out and starting again.
In "Europa" she reiterates Titian's straining goddess as a remarkably accurate blob of bright pink and then crosses it out, as if dissatisfied.
("I got to think of a better name," he said, crossing it out. " 'Giving Back'? Yeah, man, 'Giving Back,' that's good").
With a nice fountain pen, purchased on the Rue Saint-Dominique, I write something down and cross it out and then write it again, changing only one word.
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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