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Discover Ludwig'lazy bones' is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it in any informal and humorous contexts to refer to someone who is lazy or not working hard. For example: "All you ever do is sit around; you're such a lazy bones!".
Dictionary
lazy bones
noun
Alternative form of lazybones
Exact(28)
Was the television viewer in 1950, who at least selected channels, really a lazy bones?
Lazy Bones, meanwhile, might be utterly derivative, but at least the source material was good.
Robert Adler, the inventor of the Lazy Bones, carried remote technology forward with an ultrasound device called the Space Command.
The reason: cable channels have had enormous success in the summer picnicking on their lazy bones -- otherwise known as repeats.
In 1950, Zenith created a television remote control called Lazy Bones, which communicated with the set through a wire.
With Zenith's introduction in 1950 of the first television remote control — the "Lazy Bones" — the lean-back position could be preserved for long periods.
Similar(32)
Undermining the book's structural deftness is a lazy bone.
The lazy-bones anti-cook doesn't have to do any work to procure ingredients, but can learn the basics of cooking good food.
He was said to have graduated from Oxford, but was bone lazy.
A reference interval of Strain Energy Density (SED), corresponding to the dead zone or lazy zone in bone mechanics, is adopted to control the update of the design variables.
Every once in a while, he just pops up and says things like, "Being bone lazy".
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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