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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fantasises of" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
Example: She often fantasises of living in a remote cabin in the woods, away from the hustle and bustle of the city.
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I don't want to stir up old arguments but I remember being repelled by Philip Ridley's 2005 play Mercury Fur because it used a 10-year-old to illustrate a nightmare future in which East End gangs feed the murderous fantasises of rich clients.
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Meanwhile, I fantasise of a fat glass of Carlsberg Export.
But before it is dismissed as the rabid fantasising of the Global Justice Movement, certain caveats are in order.
Jihadsts – young men who dream of a "French intifada" in the infamous gritty ethnic banlieue – fantasise of more repressive, violent police as recruiters.
Those who call this our Independence Day, fantasising of returning to a never-never time before they married, when they were free, easy, single and master of their fate, are delusional.
They would look down and see the red, see the badge and shirt worn by their heroes before them and be reminded that this was the pinnacle of their playing days, what they had only fantasised of when on the parks and playgrounds, what had motivated them when making their ways in their burgeoning careers.
She wholly inhabits Muriel: her wide-eyed and slightly stupefied look; her Eeyore-like speech; the pathetic way she slumps on her bed and gazes at pictures of other people's weddings, fantasising of a happiness she neither deserves nor experiences.
Such inflated self-regard has been a common Tory trait in the post-imperial period – Churchill fantasised of a Britain exerting itself across three global axes – in Europe, across the Commonwealth, and across the Atlantic.
Nestled between endless rows of alcohol, Jonah Hill's character fantasises about all of the various scenarios that could lead to him buying booze and getting the girl.
It made a nice break from daydreaming during chemistry lessons about what sex might be like, which always seemed to be my fantasising lesson of choice.
"Everybody kind of fantasises about it – flying – and it's an amazing place in history right now that man actually has the ability to pull it off".
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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