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Discover Ludwig'frightening light' is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it in a variety of contexts, such as when describing a physical setting, a character's emotions, or a particular event. For example: "The storm outside was illuminated by a frightenening light that seemed to engulf the entire room."
Exact(3)
The girls' predicament signaled the tangled roots of a crisis that Levenson forcefully brings into frightening light.
As she walked by the kitchen just after midnight, she told me, she saw "a big frightening light outside my window".
On Wednesday, the same ONS threw frightening light on the nature of this recovery, by publishing new numbers suggesting that the 133% year-on-year increase in zero-hours contracts which it had already reported is not the end of the zero-hours story.
Similar(57)
The pay (compared with Tate's peer institutions around the world) is poor; the politics frightening in light of Brexit, recession, and Britain's increasing cultural conservatism and insularity.
I agree, pointing out that the widespread use of antibiotics in farming is frightening, especially in light of fast-developing antibiotic resistance.
Maybe, like swearwords, it is merely a way of defusing something intrinsically frightening, shedding a garish light on the shadows and taboos of sex.
But when workers began to replace the slate roof in 1998, a frightening fact came to light: the roof timbers were cracking.
It was frightening because all the lights had gone out and we didn't hear anything from the driver, so we wondered how he was.' (Fiona Trueman on the Piccadilly Line).
Scorpions are nocturnal and they'll be frightened by the light".
Witnessing the female characters on TV comedies today, I find it hard not to marvel at the effortful overcompensation at play here, as adult women are transformed into something lighter, perkier, less frightening.
The group wrote to Spears and asked her to reconsider, saying she should take into account "the plight of captive wild animals caged and forced to tolerate bright lights, crowds and frightening levels of noise".
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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