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'embellish' is a correct word in written English.
You can use it to describe adding ornamentation or decoration to something, as in the following example sentence: The bride embellished her wedding dress with lace and pearls.
Exact(60)
Through sensory description we create and embellish our stories.
Several of these have been restored to something approaching their former glory by national conservation bodies like English Heritage, often as an afterthought to the restoration of grand houses that they commonly embellish.
Mr Powell fought relentlessly for more resources for the armed forces; he has probably done more than any other soldier to embellish the American military's public standing.In the aftermath of September 11th it looked as if the conservatives had restored America's military machine to its former glory.
Like jazz players, early musicians can embellish melodies and chords within a certain structure.
Out in a Chinese field, interviewing a peasant who has had his land stolen, or out in an Afghan refugee camp speaking to victims of Taliban brutality, it soon becomes obvious that if you embellish and improve quotes, nobody is going to find out.
After all, your attendence would still embellish its coffers even if you are not directly paying.
But France and Germany, abetted by Russia and China, are digging their heels in .Project Mirage", indeedThis week, at the UN, France circulated a "non-paper"—not a draft for a new resolution, but an attempt to embellish the existing one.
In some countries 2-3% of claims submitted contain images retouched to "embellish the truth", he says, making injuries look worse than they really are in order to collect more money.
This is a pretty united party, as the local Socialists are not.The city itself, 760,000 people in a metropolis of some 1.2m, is run from a mayoral seat whose "crystal hall" would embellish any royal palace by one of the few PP people Mr Zaplana could not boss around: Rita Barberá, mayor since 1991, and expecting to stay so.
Tellers have a duty to embellish and elaborate, even to steal.
Before his resignation in a tax scandal, Spiro Agnew did little to embellish the presidency of Richard Nixon (apart from uttering the alliterative phrase William Safire wrote for him—"nattering nabobs of negativism"—to disparage the administration's critics).
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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