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Discover Ludwig"evoke with" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to bring forth a specific emotion or reaction in someone through a certain stimulus or action. Example: The beautiful music evoked feelings of nostalgia and longing with its haunting melody.
Exact(20)
At times her grin and lowered head seem to evoke, with tongue in cheek, Norman Bates.
"Gift-giving should provoke emotions -- the more experience you can evoke with a gift, the better the gift will be.
Czernowin's score includes eruptions of orchestral, vocal, and electronic pandemonium that evoke with unnerving immediacy the chaos of battle and its aftermath.
Mr. Phrasavath and Ms. Kuras address these complicated issues, and the feelings they evoke, with a patience and tact that sometimes feels a little too detached.
When Shange was eight, the Williams clan relocated to St . Louis a city that she would evoke with tender concern in her 1985 novel, "Betsey Brown".
It is just such emotions that executives at Saturn hope to evoke with the promotion, which is reminiscent of how the members of the team that wins the N.H.L. championship each season share the Stanley Cup.
Similar(36)
Her English lover Arthur Boyy" Capel, for instance, is evoked with masculine box hedges and English wildflowers.
Anne's fate is evoked with a traditional Christian symbol — that of a soaring bird.
And he evokes with uncomfortable clarity the self-imposed poverty and discomfort of the Orwell household.
Few of this book's milieus are evoked with any kind of liveliness or precision.
The snarling back and forth among the party bigwigs is evoked with amusing potency.
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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