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Discover LudwigThe phrase "evokes an image" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It means to bring to mind a mental picture or impression. You can use it anytime you want to describe something that brings a clear visual representation to the reader's mind. It can be used in descriptive writing, storytelling, poetry, or any other form of writing that aims to create a vivid image in the reader's imagination. Example: "The sun setting over the horizon evokes an image of a fiery orange ball sinking into the ocean."
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Any mention of translation exercises today evokes an image of students learning grammar by rote and struggling through the brain-torturing translation of literary texts.
Take Claritin, for example, the allergy medication with a name only a step away from clarity that evokes an image allergy sufferers long for -- a clear day.
To phrase it thus evokes an image of a young Dionysus, except that Mr. Bocelli's singing is eminently Apollonian; abandon is not one of its features.
The sixth scene evokes an image of "Two Jews: One Rich, One Poor" through the interplay of a strident melody in the lower register and a twittering chantlike theme in the upper.
New From Toyota for 2003: The Anomaly THE pickup truck evokes an image of horses, trailers and cotton fields, of gun racks and special spitoons for Beech Nut chewers balanced on the floor boards.
She often evokes an image of clueless Easterners who cannot fathom that the combined size of the new national monuments created by President Clinton, for example, is bigger than the state of Connecticut.
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I try to evoke an image, but I can't.
For years, the name Ron Artest evoked an image of the quintessential out-of-control athlete.
"A lot of golf terms actually evoke an image of what is happening out there," Voorhees said.
With his receding hairline, doughy middle and subdued manner, Emelianenko fails to evoke an image of the Russian warrior.
They evoke an image of the artist as a child at play on the shore of oceanic infinitude.
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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