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Discover LudwigThe phrase "long obsolete" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to describe something which is very old and has been unused or abandoned for a long time. For example: "Many of the town's buildings were long obsolete by the time of the disaster."
Exact(9)
Meanwhile, exonerate in the sense of "discharge" is, as the OED notes, long obsolete.
Despite long obsolete zoning restrictions, hotels, restaurants, night life and retail have come to the district in incredible numbers, bringing with them thousands of new jobs, visitors and creative professionals.
The school also sent home a sort of yearbook, long obsolete in most no-frills poorer elementary schools, full of photographs of students, samples of their work and testimonial letters from parents.
But Mr. Leigh, in an e-mail and an article on The Guardian's Web site, said Mr. Assange had assured him when he turned over the password that it would work for only a matter of hours, so he assumed it was long obsolete by the time his book was published.
The generic approach is long obsolete.
Digitising the collections wasn't straightforward - some were recorded on long obsolete 8-track tapes.
Similar(51)
In 1986, La Fémis replaced France's main film school, l'IDHEC, which was largely a technical school staffed by long-obsolete ex-professionals.
From 1976 through 1979, the National Archives worked on recovering certain 1960 census data from tapes designed to run on long-obsolete machines.
A million years from now, a collection of mysterious artifacts would remain to puzzle whatever alien beings might stumble upon them: the flooded tunnel under the English Channel; bank vaults full of mildewed money; obelisks warning of buried atomic waste (as current law requires) in seven long-obsolete human languages, with pictures.
The real answer is depressing - banking is a stagnant market running on long-obsolete infrastructure, which improves only when forced to by government.
The US trade measure eliminates a long-obsolete 1974 provision, called the Jackson-Vanik Amendment, that tied trade relations with the former Soviet Union to the emigration of Jews and other Soviet minorities.
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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