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Discover Ludwig"impede of" is not a correct phrase in written English.
The correct phrase would be "impede on," which means to obstruct or hinder. You can use this phrase in a sentence such as: The heavy traffic impeded on our ability to arrive at the meeting on time.
Exact(1)
This would impede, of course, the efforts of marketers using Twitter's legitimate advertising platform to send DMs, something that is part of the flow of a few of Twitter's ad products.
Similar(59)
High rates of false negatives impede interrogation of the complete transcriptional status of a cell type.
US district court judge Sharon Gleason ruled in Anchorage that Greenpeace was in civil contempt because of the protesters' impeding of the vessel.
The immune complexed impeded of electrons transporting between the surface of electrodes and K3[Fe CN 6]/K4[Fe CN 6]-PBS solution.
This good prognosis is associated with the impeding of the transcriptional activity mediated by the ER [ 7].
Such difficulties often impede consideration of the diagnosis of dying and implementation of an EOLC strategy.
They impede production of green energy and the reduction of GHG emissions, she says.
Lack of adequate genetic and genomic resources impede progress of crop improvement in chickpea.
Caps must not impede development of broadband.
South African authorities use shark nets to impede entry of sharks to the swimming zones.
Our government warns that capping the payments "would impede consolidation" of landholdings.
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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