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Discover Ludwig"laced by" is a legitimate phrase that can be used in written English.
Generally, it is used to describe something filled, or surrounded, by something else. For example, you could say: The dance floor was laced by happy couples as the party began.
Exact(24)
That is especially true here at McKinley, which is laced by glaciers.
It's obvious that plenty of Mr. Taylor's facts are laced by fancy.
As a result, great stretches of what we now consider western China, southwestern Mongolia and eastern Tajikistan became barren earth or laced by sand dunes.
By 1370 80 the hose grew longer to become tights and were laced by points all around the body to the by-then waist-length undertunic.
Laced by great rivers and small streams, England is a fertile land, and the generosity of its soil has supported a thriving agricultural economy for millennia.
The West Bank is being laced by a 700km-long separation wall and fence that will effectively annex 12% of the West Bank.
Similar(36)
Over the last six months, about 5,000 pigs have eaten feed laced with By-O-Reg after being weaned from their mothers.
Its suburbs and skyscrapers were laced together by superhighways full of radio-guided cars.
Then the gyoza ($7) arrive, upside down, their browned undersides laced together by a frill of translucent, crackly dough.
A strait-laced, by-the-book senior officer, Colonel West deliberately disregarded Army rules and regulations, gambling -- and eventually losing -- a successful 22-year military career that seemed destined for further advancement.
But that anger is also, by necessity, laced with ambivalence.
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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