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Discover Ludwig'definitive date' is a correct and usable expression in written English
You can use it to refer to the exact date when an event or an action will take place. For example, "We haven't been able to set a definitive date for the concert, but we'll let you know as soon as we have one."
Exact(21)
Downing Street said there was no definitive date yet for the withdrawal of the former Royal Navy flagship.
But he said a definitive date had been selected for the return of the network's recent breakthrough hit "The Voice".
The agreement "provides a definitive date for the satisfaction of a key condition of our bid," said Gregory Wilkins, Barrick's chief executive.
He could return to the lineup during the Penguins' four-game homestand that begins Dec. 27, but he has not set a definitive date.
("The cabinet?" Akkam said scornfully. "Who is going to accept being in this position? It's very clear now we want a definitive date for a presidential election").
But few have gone so far as to give a definitive date for the commercial debut of these cars of the future.
Similar(37)
Tombstones, with their falsely definitive dates, are a joke.
Pressed on human landings on Mars and asteroids, Bolden said it was too early to give definitive dates.
There has been criticism that the approach commonly used to ascertain the duration of the patient interval (i.e. subtracting date of first symptom from date of first presentation) is too empirically grounded, as it assumes that there are objective, definitive dates when events occurred, which are readily collectable [ 41].
He did not offer a definitive new date.
They just no longer have a definitive end date.
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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