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Discover Ludwig"fixed into" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to something that has been placed firmly and securely, and is unlikely to move. For example, "The shelf was fixed into the wall, so it couldn't be knocked over."
Exact(59)
The Maclure Hypothesis is that ladders were fixed into the holes.
"Scared" turns into "scarred," "top" into "toy," "conclusive" into "conducive," "bar" into "bra," "fixed" into "faxed".
SoHo still has a large concentration of them, often with green or purple glass inserts fixed into ornate iron matrixes.
I peer down as the train crosses a bridge topped by black metal railings fixed into its coping stones.
In the first models, the sliding jaw was fixed into position by a wedge that was hammered into place.
Atmospheric nitrogen is fixed into usable nitrates or ammonium by root-dwelling associates, usually the actinomycete Frankia.
To dissuade such poor souls, clusters of pointed metal studs, each about 3in high, have been fixed into the surface.
This is encased inside a plastic housing which is then fixed into the entrance of a hive.
In the C-4 cycle, however, there are additional steps before the CO2 is fixed into a three-carbon compound.
"I never use machinery, other than an old concrete mixer, so larger pieces are cast in fragments and then fixed into place," Mr. Marchiori said.
The train shed is a tremendous steel structure, joined up to a gargantuan marble station, 200m wide with motifs scrolls and eagles' wings fixed into the walls.
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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