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Discover Ludwig"it epitomized" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to mean that something represented a particular quality in its most extreme form, or served as an example of something. For example, "The painting by Monet epitomized the Impressionist movement."
Exact(35)
Made of mahogany, satinwood and ebony, with a kitschy little inlaid design on its veneer front, it epitomized the luxury appeal of Art Deco, not meant for a mass market.
From the time I first heard about "Einstein," while growing up just outside New York — the city whose 1970s downtown avant-garde it epitomized, and where it had its American premiere at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1976 — I knew that it was a seminal event in opera history.
In its generous embrace of theory and practice and its range from the cosmic to the mundane it epitomized the best impulses of American democracy.
With its mongrel mixture of media, its peacock displays of frivolous virtuosity, its irredeemable irreality and its reliance on the most blatant and inflexible conventions, it epitomized for Tolstoy the ultimate degradation of art and stood as a metaphor for falsity in social relations.
Once, it epitomized summer elegance.
It epitomized the game.
Similar(21)
"It epitomizes politics at its worst".
And it epitomizes raw capitalism in both its glory and its shame.
Built in 1938 and renovated in 1999, it epitomizes Chicago's unassuming sense of its lakefront.
It epitomizes everything Shirley.
But the syndrome it epitomizes is not harmless.
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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