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Discover LudwigThe phrase "lodged into" is correct in written English.
It is used to describe something that has been inserted firmly into something else. For example: She lodged the key into the lock and turned it, unlocking the door.
Exact(58)
The game is lodged into his marrow.
The crystals are comparable, in a human context, to a sharp stone lodged into a boot.
Mid-sentence a brick lodged into my gray matter, in that place where many fine words once roamed.
Lodged into this Billboard report on the impact of "Thriller" is a well-known fact that pops a little louder today.
He alleged that a fee of £7m was lodged into an Isle of Man bank account, which was controlled by a former trustee of Belfast law firm Tughans.
One, lodged into a gallery threshold, is a large stainless-steel ring bracketed, cater-corner, by two pieces of darker metal.
My life has turned into a mangled CDT lab of confusion and frustration and microscopic foreign bodies that I'm pretty sure have lodged into my eyeball.
The force of the collision was so strong that an engine from the freight train lodged into a Metrolink passenger car.
Gillespie admits it could also be part of a reef, a geological formation or any number of things once lodged into the seabed and now drifted away.
Similar(2)
Caldwell said she hoped to emulate Summitt, who lodges into her players' lives like a root, providing steady nourishment.
The round fired shattered the rear window of the victim's car, lodging into the driver's seat, coming within inches of hitting him, according to police reports.
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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