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Discover Ludwig'immortalise' is a correct and usable word in written English
You can use the word when you want to describe the process of making something or someone famous or remembered for a very long time. For example, you could say "The musician's famous song immortalised him in popular culture."
Dictionary
immortalise
verb
To give unending life to, to make immortal.
Exact(60)
Dr Beloveth Powerful said: "My paternal grandfather's first name was Havard, so because I was so close to him before he died, I chose to immortalise his name.
His euphoric campaign team rushed to immortalise the moment by releasing a new ad they called, of course, "The Moment".
At one point its then chairman, Sir Paul Girolami, travelled around Glaxo's facilities with a sculptor in tow, ready to immortalise him for the company's headquarters.There was little, though, that Glaxo could do to stop Zantac's patent from expiring.
It was the latest example of a "naming opportunity" (or, as Slate on-line magazine brutally calls it, "monogrammed giving").As America's thundering economy creates thousands of nouveaux riches, universities, colleges, museums, libraries and other non-profit groups are urging the newly rich to immortalise their names.
To get to the art there one must climb the stairs and pass through seemingly solid masses of tourists whose only movement is the tapping of their smart phone cameras as they immortalise one another.
He is the first prime minister not to be set in wax at Madame Tussauds, and now Shenda Amery, the British artist who sculpted busts of John Major and Maggie Thatcher, has revealed she has no plans to immortalise the embattled Scot.
While a campaign was launched yesterday to immortalise Seve Ballesteros as the image of the European Tour, the great Spanish golfer continued to be honoured across the world.
These have featured on countless releases and reissues, been widely published and exhibited and demonstrate Leloir's amazing ability to immortalise performers and to capture candid moments in the dressing rooms and the corridors of the legendary Paris venue.
With four cameras angled at the plinth at all times, the idea, Gormley said, was to immortalise the debates of our times.
Does she seduce the Boy/Angel 1 (Bejun Mehta), who is commissioned to immortalise The Protector's life in an illuminated book?
The story was reported by The Times journalist George Steer; it was picked up by the French newspaper L'Humanité and read by Pablo Picasso, who lived in Paris and immediately started work on the vast monochrome painting that would immortalise the name Guernica.
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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