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Discover Ludwig"indifferent in" is not a correct and usable phrase in written English.
To express the idea of being indifferent, you could use "indifferent to" or "indifferent towards." For example: John is indifferent to his sister's opinion.
Exact(56)
Chain pickerel are sluggish and indifferent in the warmer months.
Cromwell is interestingly indifferent in matters of religion, and at times almost skeptical or near-atheist.
They think presidents, prime ministers and the like are indifferent — in fact, they are impotent.
Good, bad or indifferent, in fact, the state can hardly wait to ante up again.
The scale of the paintings is indifferent, in the way of graphic art.
At Senior Bowl practices, he looked overwhelming in some drills and indifferent in others.
Normally we're pretty indifferent in our house to the annual jamboree in Tinseltown.
Both Sheffield and Lancaster were utterly indifferent (in the best possible kind of way) to my age.
Similar(3)
On a nice day, you can see more contemporary art -- good, bad, indifferent -- in less time than you can anywhere outside of an art fair.
"His personality", he says wryly, "doesn't leave people indifferent".In this section The anti-Sarkozy vote Koran study Seeking gifts Tempestuous times The prisoner of Astrakhan April showers on the euro ReprintsOther locals concur.
Firstly, for each attribute the association between the response 'very important' and 'important' was compared to the remaining three responses ('not important at all'notnot important'indifferentent') in the final year students compared to the recent graduates and was assessed by standard Fisher Exact tests.
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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