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The word 'foist' is correct and usable in written English.
It is a verb that means to insert or impose something unwanted or unpleasant on someone, usually against their will. For example: "The government foisted a new tax on its citizens."
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"Not only would the SNP force unprecedented cuts in Scotland through full fiscal autonomy, they would foist disastrous economic policies on the rest of the UK too.
Resist conferences that foist a pack of CV stuffing useless mouths onto you.
The Turks have never forgiven the West for trying to foist a Kurdish state on them in 1920.
Moreover, the ITU has no power to foist rules on governments that refuse to bargain.
The final straw was a ballot measure passed last November against the close confinement of farm animals, which is just the sort of thing that the coast's "agriculturally uneducated city dwellers" like to foist on the people who feed them, says William Maze, a former state assemblyman who now manages Mr Rogers's organisation.
So the government may end up using new planning powers to foist development on some unwilling communities.Once that would have been a clear vote-loser thanks to the strength of nimbyism.
All of these structures cost millions of dollars a year to maintain, making the games' costs their enduring "legacy .Perhaps the only encouraging finding in Mr Zimbalist's work is that potential hosts are getting wise to the bad deal the IOC and FIFA seek to foist on them.
It failed miserably in the fierce competition with Reuters and Bloomberg, both single-minded companies determined to foist their terminals on traders, and was sold earlier this year for only $510m.
A few whispers have spread about replacing Mr Brown with another leader but there is no obvious successor, and to foist another prime minister on the electorate now would probably look both chaotic and undemocratic.Boris Johnson, the Tory candidate, will be the mayor of London, casting Labour into even darker gloom.
Reprints Related items The Church of England: Holy matrimonyJul 14th 2005When women began to be ordained over a decade ago, conservative parishes were given an elaborate opt-out: instead of labouring under the episcopal oversight of a liberal, pro-female-ordination type, they could choose to be in the care of a so-called "flying bishop" who would never foist a female vicar on them.
But Egypt's rulers proved unexpectedly stubborn; not merely because they loathe Islamists, but because they feared, perhaps rightly, that Israel had intended all along to foist Gaza and its troubles onto them, perpetuating the truncation of the putative Palestinian state.
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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