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The phrase "discuss about something" is not grammatically correct.
"Discuss" already means to talk about or consider something, so adding the word "about" is redundant. Example: Let's discuss the budget for the project at the meeting tomorrow.
Exact(1)
"One thing that is so difficult for African people: there's no way that you can discuss about something that's happened below the belt," Soldaat said.
Similar(59)
We are all discussing about something similar to a "paradigm shift", in the sense described by Kuhn [3]: (a) presenting results "sufficiently unprecedented to attract an enduring group of adherents away from competing modes of scientific activity" and (b) "being sufficiently open-ended to leave all sorts of problems for the redefined group of practitioners to solve".
Don't get all fancy and you end up looking like a clown.. Never discuss about sex or something like that.
This isn't something to discuss about "possibilities" or "maybes".
"You don't fly across the Atlantic and meet with Europe's most powerful antitrust official without having something significant to discuss about your case," said Tom McQuail, a partner in the Brussels office of the law firm Morrison & Foerster and a specialist in antitrust law, who does not represent any of the companies involved in the investigation.
Berkeley psychologist Prof Bob Levenson asked couples to discuss something about their partner that annoyed them - a touchy subject.
Many candidates chose to discuss something about themselves in the opening.
This structure is usually something worth discussing — about what it says about time and memory and the attrition of hope — but in this case, I'm not going to bother.
Now on the fourth day of my book tour for Fair Game and I am delighted because I have been given abundant opportunity to discuss something I feel passionately about: the politicization of our intelligence services.
We had already discussed about how we wanted to do something to help other people and maybe this just might be one of the ways in which we could do that.
As the musicologist Yo Tomita points out, in some manuscripts the handwriting of husband and wife is intertwined, "in such a manner that they must surely have discussed something about the copies they were making together".
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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