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The word inducing is correct and usable in written English
You can use inducing to describe a situation or action that causes or encourages a particular feeling, emotion, or reaction. For example, "The thought of spending time with his family induced a feeling of joy within him."
Exact(28)
Rather than the usual Conservative remedy of inducing a depression to push down on wages and prices, he tried the then new conventional wisdom of direct legislation to make inflationary wage and price rises a crime.
Governments are well aware of this power of media saturation as a tool for inducing political amnesia.
The Lib Dems won Sheffield Hallam from the Tories that year by inducing erstwhile Labour voters to rally behind a fellow left-winger against a common enemy.
He scored even more points for inducing the Turkish-Cypriots to endorse a UN plan for Cyprus (which was rejected by Greek-Cypriots).
This must also be combined with the "irritant" effect of inducing asthma attacks in susceptible people plus an increased risk of emphysema and myocardial infarction.
It would also separate Golkar and the armed forces, encouraging a healthy and open exchange of criticism perhaps even inducing the two to drag out some of each other's skeletons.
Similar(32)
All that leaves is seizure-inducing Flash graphics and links to buy cinema tickets that no one will ever click on (you'd get more accurate results trying to order tickets on a potato).
It will instead be made from disgusting, foul, vomit-inducing "standard cocoa mix chocolate".
But even so, as I note that Piketty's bookshelves are lined with such headache-inducing titles as The Principles of Microeconomics and The Political Influence of Keynesianism, simple folk like me still need some help here.
I know who I am and what my style raison d'être is, and if that involves a headache-inducing, print-filled, colourful ensemble with three or four bags shoved on the arms – then so be it.
I knock on the table at dinner parties, alone in front of the television, whenever anything is said that could be deemed exceptionally good or bad luck, and hence curse- or jinx-inducing.
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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