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Discover LudwigThe phrase "dangerous how" is not standard in written English and may be confusing without context
It can be used when questioning the nature or extent of something being dangerous, often in a rhetorical or informal context. Example: "It's dangerous how easily misinformation spreads online."
Exact(13)
Caffeine with alcohol: how dangerous, how insidious, how... Irish coffee.
Cold, brown, mushy, dangerous — how could this be worse?
"If it's so dangerous, how come we let Bonita and Isaac do it?" he asked.
It is easy to see how dangerous, how fallacious the practice of literary biography looks in this light.
If the police officers had fact-based reasons to believe that people were "armed and dangerous," how could they be wrong almost 100 percent of the time?
While experts are not necessarily politically neutral, it is absurd, and dangerous, how often expertise is denigrated when it is at odds with ideology.
Similar(47)
Court life is dangerous, but how dangerous will it get for Katherine?
That is not only very unusual, it is also super-fucking-dangerous. How can art help in that?
Sure, superheroing was dangerous--how many of the aforementioned supervillains had almost killed them, destroyed the Earth, blown up the universe, etc.?--but they were secure in the knowledge that the good guys always won in the end.
How dangerous.
How dangerous is bulimia?
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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