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Discover Ludwig'feeble attendance' is a correct and usable expression in written English
You could use it to describe the low attendance rate at an event, such as, "The feeble attendance at the concert was due to bad weather."
Exact(2)
More drifted in but the feeble attendance was in stark contrast to the packed house that greeted the opening day of athletics at London 2012.
But two major-league franchises, both of them called the Washington Senators, packed up and left because of feeble attendance at their games.The hopelessness of the players was chiefly to blame.
Similar(57)
Four institutions accepted feeble-minded (mostly less aged) elderly people.
The West's response was feeble.
Though that might be true, it's a pulse that has grown increasingly feeble over the years – which might explain the feeling shared by many in attendance that the party's best times are already behind us.
Wiseman was not in attendance, but fret not that the 86 year-old director was too feeble to appear; he was in Europe shooting his next movie.
Nearly ninety years later, theatre attendance is tumbling again, audiences and critics are disgruntled, and each new week brings a lament about the feeble box-office and a postmortem for some surefire hit that no one came to see.
Feeble labeling.
How feeble!
Feeble stuff.
Too feeble.
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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