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The word "dusts" is correct in written English
It can be used when referring to the act of applying a fine powder or when describing the process of removing dust from a surface. Example: "She dusts the shelves every Saturday to keep the house clean." Alternatives include "applies powder" or "cleans dust."
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Buy from Amazon.com; Amazon.co.uk An elegant British writer dusts down Homer for a new generation, examining in detail the character of his two epics, from the gore of "The Iliad" to the blindings of "The Odyssey".
The firm eventually dusts off the rulebook and splits the roles of chairman and chief executive to win back institutional investors.Such was the history of Marks & Spencer, Britain's biggest clothing retailer, eight years ago.
Should you or shouldn't you ask him to go faster?Murmansk: Well into the month of May, the runway at Murmansk is still fringed with snow; it dusts the pine trees over which incoming planes descend, along with still-frozen ponds and rivers.
A correspondent dusts off his leather driving gloves and takes it for a spin Mortgaging the future Debt has grown at an astonishing speed across the rich world in the past 50 years, as the financial industry found more and more ways to lend.
Mr Bate dusts off the much-told story, and brings his man much closer to real danger.
Jeffrey Saut dusts off the Frank Baum classic "The Wizard of Oz" and demonstrates the tale's contemporary relevance.Why let all the political blogs have all the fun with the appointment speculation game?
Sandstorms whip up toxic dusts that poison locals and that have been deposited as far away as the East China Sea.Uzbekistan's 400,000-odd Karakalpaks (literally, Black Hats), a Turkic people that traditionally herded and fished, once had a striking culture.
The best bits are where he dusts off his old notebooks and finds stories that bring Brazil alive.
Limestone, when pulverized, forms silt-sized dusts.
Many environmental substances as well as some encountered in the workplace are toxic in high doses; these include organic solvents, heavy metals, mineral dusts, dyes, and cigarette smoke.
Protection against inhalation of arsenic-containing dusts is recommended, but most poisoning appears to come from ingestion.
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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