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Discover Ludwig"kindly remark" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English
It is typically used as a polite request for someone to make a comment or observation. It can be used in formal or informal contexts. Example: "Could you kindly remark on the progress of the project during tomorrow's meeting?"
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At the Catholic Center on First Avenue, the headquarters of the archdiocese, workers who saw the cardinal regularly recalled him not as a world leader but as a friendly boss who had time for a bantering chat or a kindly remark.
Similar(59)
When we take her out, kindly strangers remark, "Oh, she's so curious!" Of course, this may be a polite way of acknowledging the fearsome interrogatory stare she has been fixing on them for half an hour.
Mr. Spitzer did not take kindly to the remark.
Mr Krugman did not take kindly to the remark, responding (with considerable snark) that he wasn't lining up suspect allies and falsifying evidence.
Microsoft didn't take too kindly to that remark.
Lucero, who kindly ignored the remark, said that the first rule is to turn off the power where you're working.
If you want to compliment an Italian, remark kindly on his home town.
The speaker does not take kindly to those remarks.
Santanna and Chagas did not take kindly to those remarks.
"You are becoming a monster," she warned, kindly adjusting her remarks to the present tense.
The New Yorker, August 1 , 1925P. 5 It was Percy Hammond who wandered into the night with a friend after an early wartime opening and remarked kindly, "C'est la guerre".
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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