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Discover LudwigThe phrase "imputation of" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to indicate the act of assigning or attributing a particular quality or action to someone or something. Example: The imputation of greed to the wealthy businessman caused public outrage and sparked a national debate on income inequality.
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To ignore it, or to be asexual, without consequent social opprobrium or imputation of deficiency.
It's the imputation of value, almost like a 'blessing'".
But the imputation of effeminacy makes a point (who wears the panties in your house? man or mouse?).
The fault, if the imputation of it is just, is merely the general fault of music in our time.
There are numerous newspaper interviewees who recognise neither the phrasing nor imputation of things they are supposed to have said.
"There are different ways of having fun," Powell answers, a little self-deprecatingly, as if he's warding off an imputation of moral seriousness and needs his friend's indulgence.
As a way of discrediting a political opponent, the imputation of sexual irregularity is as effective in the fatness of these pursy times as it ever was.
Besides unduly flattering a lot of mediocre work, the imputation of longing — unfulfilled or otherwise — fails with the show's second-best painter, the Berlin realist Adolph Menzel.
While I, too, cringe at the term "customer" and its grubbily commercial associations, I like its imputation of autonomy and infallible rightness.
"Astroturfing" is the critics' preferred term for this phenomenon, with its imputation of a synthetic, top-down structure to contrast with the outward appearance of grassroots independence.
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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