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Discover Ludwig"elongated face" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It describes a face that appears longer than usual. It can be used in different situations, such as describing a person's physical features, in storytelling, or in poetic descriptions. Example: Her slender figure was complemented by her beautifully elongated face, giving her an elegant and regal appearance.
Exact(18)
The horns, which may be over six feet (1.8 metres) long, spread outward and upward, approaching each other toward the tips; they meet more or less in one plane above the rounded forehead and elongated face.
Her elongated face can darken with anxiety or crack open in a broad, raucous laugh.
Its elongated face reminded him of El Greco, and he inscribed it "With apologies to Greco/and God/RB".
Leonardo's Cecilia has sloping, slender shoulders, white skin over delicate collarbones, a pale throat adorned with a black necklace, an exquisitely elongated face with a superb nose.
In campaigns for local elections in February 1999 and parliamentary elections a year later, reformist advertising made use of Dr. Mossadegh's sad, elongated face.
Nearby and made almost exactly 100 years later, an apostle's head from Notre-Dame in Paris powerfully combines an elongated face; expertly handled hair, beard and mouth; and unnatural, masklike eyes that seem fixed on another world.
Similar(42)
Her people have elongated faces and pale forms; they're etiolated Modiglianis.
We used the 41 compressed and elongated faces from Experiment 2A in their upright, inverted, and contrast-negated form.
His works from the turn of the 17th century are recognizably Mannerist featuring elongated linear faces; swaying, gracefully curving, elongated bodies; and icy pastel colours and recall those of Tintoretto in Italy and El Greco in Spain.
The entoglenoid process is elongated and faces primarily laterally.
The figures are elongated, the faces oval, and the shapes ethereal, reminiscent at times of Sandro Botticelli (see cover Vol.7, No.3, Emerging Infectious Diseases).
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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