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Does this noun exist?
As the English "charm" does, this noun kêlêsis can mean "appeal" but also something explicitly magical, a spell or conjuration.
Similar(58)
If you find a suspect adjective, think to yourself: Does this word describe the noun?
To do this, think about a noun and/or a few action verbs.
When did the noun bailout gain its pejorative connotation?
("I'll do the nouns, you do the verbs").
Question: how does a noun meaning "receptacle for liquid" and later "mechanized cavalry" come to be a verb meaning "to fail spectacularly"?
Some now contend that it does not have noun cases at all, others that it has two onee for the possessive, the other for everything else) while still others maintain that there are three or four cases.
For instance, they might know that their language will either place adjectives before nouns, like English does, or after nouns, as in French (Moulin Rouge, for instance, means "Windmill Red").
Yet this noun did not precede the pronoun, but came after, way after, revealing its identity only in the following sentence.
However, WordNet does not contain nouns in plural form.
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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