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'intends by' is correct and can be used in written English.
It is used to express someone's intention to do something by a certain means or in a certain way. For example: He intends by speaking at the rally to emphasize the importance of voting.
Exact(18)
To fail to convey the meaning one intends by one's words.
(I don't care what Robert Kusmirowski intends by his painstaking reconstruction of the Una-bomber Ted Kaczynski's cabin; it's dumb).
Critics say the system could have the opposite effect from what it intends, by chilling internal investigations.
So will its financial action task-force on money laundering, which intends by June to list on a website those countries it sees as especially unco-operative.
In a document filed with the United Nations, in preparation for a global climate summit scheduled to take place in Paris this December, the White House said that the U.S. intends, by 2025, to reduce its greenhouse-gas emissions by more than a quarter, through existing and new regulations drawn up by the Environmental Protection Agency and other government bodies.
To the argument of proximity, Argentina has added in recent times the contention that Britain intends, by keeping control of the Falklands, to rob Argentina of the newly discovered deep-sea oil reserves and rich fisheries within the Falklands' territorial waters.
Similar(40)
Surely one intended by the filmmakers.
So we know what is intended by the wording.
But it would not be intended by me.
The word intended by the writer was "agog," not "aghast".
HENDRIK HERTZBERG: It was definitely not intended by the founders.
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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