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Discover Ludwig"elaborate of" is not a correct phrase in written English.
The correct phrase is "elaborate on," which means to give more details or explanation about something. Example: The speaker asked me to elaborate on my response to the question.
Exact(51)
Spanish documents indicate that the priesthood was one of the most elaborate of Aztec institutions.
That of Cuenca (c. 1189) is the most elaborate of the Castilian fueros.
The most elaborate of them gets a distance from the log pile.
The most elaborate of these, in June 1997, is the subject of Dr. Postol's attack.
But the Central Valley's program is the most elaborate of its kind.
The Stratton Mountain Club, the newest and most elaborate of the bunch, opened last February.
Similar(7)
This kind of of elaborate trivialization of human suffering is just what I missed.
This process enables the production of elaborate combinations of graded properties distributed over geometrically complex structures within a single object.
The discerning, inferring and elaborating of moral principles is a task for practical reasonableness.
Rowland elaborated, "Of course, I did [feel emotional upon hearing 'Girl']!
Ting has kept much of the elaborate décor of Legacy, the previous restaurant here.
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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