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Discover Ludwig"get a cake" is a correctly formed sentence in written English.
Example: "Let's get a cake for dessert tonight!".
Exact(18)
The same with Amanda, but she would sometimes get a cake.
Monday: Mother-in-law (3 p.m. and the winds and rain are picking up): "I think I'll get a cake to celebrate".
"Even on your birthday, you'd get a cake and a four-hour shift," said John Gillespie, Ed's brother, echoing a line the candidate often uses on the stump.
"It's like baking a cake: if you leave out one ingredient, you aren't going to get a cake," said John Simmons, director of Strategic Learning Initiatives, an organization that has helped the district turn around failing schools.
There are many differences between the case of the senator who lost his job and the same-sex couple who couldn't get a cake; undoubtedly, there is a difference between acting like a jerk and getting married (though the plaintiff in the cake case claims to have been offended by the gay couple's intention to get married).
And I didn't get a cake either.
Similar(42)
I'm an accomplished confectionery artist and I can't even get a cake-decorating job at Kroger's".
"I was thinking we [don't] get a cake-train; we get a real train on top of the cake.
The pastoral head said we should have got a cake.
"He got a cake but when it was Roberto Carlos's birthday, the president of Anzhi gave him a Bugatti," said Seluk.
"Surely if he'd publicised the event ahead of time, he might have got a cake from fans like they get on Test Match Special!
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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