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Discover LudwigThe phrase "loads of facts" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate a large quantity of information or data on a particular subject.
Example: "The report was filled with loads of facts about climate change and its impact on the environment."
Alternatives: "a wealth of facts" or "plenty of facts".
Exact(6)
When they're presented with loads of facts they switch off – we all do.
Theory A explains loads of facts and is supported by mountains of evidence.
The authors offer information from the ground up about every sport in the Summer Games they explain why it's worth watching canoeing and field hockey along with loads of facts about the rules, the scoring, and even the equipment specs.
The authors offer information from the ground up about every sport in the Summer Games — they explain why it's worth watching canoeing and field hockey — along with loads of facts about the rules, the scoring, and even the equipment specs.
Plenty of technically able engineers might not volunteer loads of facts about an impressive problem they cracked with code.
I mean if you're reading a newspaper and you see an article about this poor child that was damaged, it's gonna grab your attention and it's gonna tug on your emotions, it's gonna bring [out] the parent in you… But then if I saw another article that was loads of facts and figures, you don't have that emotional connection with it do you?
Similar(54)
He was very familiar with the McEwan Conflation of cramming loads of dull facts about climate change into a book and calling it fiction.
"You're listening to a load of boring facts you're not interested in," he tells his crowd, "just because they're attached to jokes".
The playlets struggle somewhat under the load of background facts the characters volunteer, but these one-acts are delicately linked, absorbing and unsettling.
Loads of them, in fact.
In the Hovatter scene, Wallace makes the reader aware of the impending information morass in a much more tactile way, with a load of pure-fact accretion that prompts Evashevsky to plead with his colleagues not to overcomplicate the television scheme.
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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