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Discover LudwigThe phrase "instructs into" is not correct and not commonly used in written English.
It is unclear and does not convey a clear meaning in standard English usage. Example: "The teacher instructs into the students about the new curriculum."
Exact(1)
"Write down the main symptoms of cholera," a teacher instructs into a microphone, her words crackling over the buzz of hundreds of school children from across the city of Maroua.
Similar(56)
Following a standard protocol, they were instructed in injecting into the subacromial space, which they subsequently practiced on phantoms and fresh-frozen cadaver shoulders.
Importantly, harsh or beneficial conditions are detected by sensory neurons that prevent or instruct entry into, or exit from, the dauer-state [19], [20].
Therefore, inhibiting Notch signaling might have therapeutic potential for human gliomas by exhausting GSCs and instruct them into less proliferative IGPs and differentiated neural cell types.
The development of a primary culture system based on the adult, non-transformed progenitor pancreas cells would represent an essential step in the study of the relationships between pancreas progenitor cells, their descendants and the signals required to instruct them into a particular lineage fate.
One individual in Florida has had excellent success, propagating Moringa trees with cuttings of various sizes, by putting branches - trimmed as instructed above, into a large potting container filled with soil.
If your ProComm Plus modem software doesn't work, the ProComm manual solemnly instructs, merely dial into CompuServe and go to the Procomm online support group.
McNeill instructs us to "cut into bannocks (using a meat plate) and then into farls"; in other words, into a round, and then into triangles.
He instructs her to climb into an office chair bolted to a red-and-gray plywood box the size of a refrigerator, and sit down on a grubby towel printed with the White House's insignia.
The panel also says it wants to get rid of Japan's "neighbouring-country clause"—a sort of self-denying ordinance which instructs historians to take into account the sentiments of neighbours (meaning China and South Korea) when writing textbooks.
It instructs us to surrender into the moment as a means of surviving the sticky situations in life.
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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