Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "crucial key" is correct and usable in written English
It is typically used to describe something that is essential or of great importance in a particular situation or context. Example: "Effective communication is a crucial key in maintaining a healthy relationship."
Exact(37)
One possibility is that "layer two" is the crucial key for solving the rest of the puzzle.
The relationships between the built environment and ecosystems in Brazil hold a crucial key to our planetary futures.
There's a marvelous bit involving a curious cat and a crucial key that Hitchcock would drool over.
There's a giant toad from which Ofelia must obtain a crucial key, and a bizarre creature whose eyes are in the palms of its hands.
Pakistan's low-income housewives, in fact, hold a crucial key to sustainable development in a country whose economy relies primarily on agriculture and remittances from Pakistanis living abroad.
I feel that this initiative is using a unique and holistic approach to fisheries sustainability that may be a crucial key to progress.
Similar(23)
It is suggested that these mechanisms are connected and are crucial keys to the wear life of these materials.
Whatever ideas last from this current generation of numerical results, and whatever the eventual mechanism s), we conclude that the breaking of spherical symmetry will survive as one of the crucial keys to the supernova puzzle.
This insistence on the validity of subjective experience, as well as her conviction that a person's childhood and early relationships may hold crucial keys to their present distress, in some ways place Rowe closer to psychoanalytic thinkers, and she shares with psychoanalysts dating back to Freud a huge interest in literature.
Pan-genomic approaches, allowing global investigation, should provide crucial keys to understand the much focused orientation of the immune response induced by stress events.
Lacks's story is only part of a larger narrative about the history of biobanking when, under pressure from Cold War-era atomic survivalism, scientists began stockpiling and freezing blood samples from global indigenous communities samples believed to hold crucial keys about everything from microbes to genetic evolution all the while facilitating the birth of the genomic age.
More suggestions(5)
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