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Discover Ludwig'looked proper' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use this phrase to describe someone who is dressed in an appropriate manner for a particular occasion. For example, "She looked proper in her new outfit for the wedding."
Exact(1)
All of the young men who served as members of parliament looked proper, dressed in suits (often with a little handkerchief in their chest pockets), and were well-spoken.
Similar(59)
It would not look proper if we told the truth.
A bearded, open-necked town clerk, it seems, just wouldn't look proper.
"They don't look proper on a course like that," he said.
She overcompensates in her effort to look proper; she borrows the most obvious references to conventional femininity.
It wouldn't look proper for the dean of a business school to have foot pedals and a force-feedback joystick in his office.
It was the sort of dress an older woman might have worn and made look proper in a fussy way, but my aunt could not help looking as if she were taking part in some slightly risqué celebration.
Questions like "What would look sexy?" or "What would look proper?" are brushed aside, leaving one desperate quest: how to get through the next 12 hours with the least amount of suffering.
Southern viewers may occasionally require a translator, for moments such as when one girl explains she doesn't want to take off her nail varnish because her hands will look "proper scratty" (scruffy).
I haven't, it's one of those places that seems to crop up everywhere at the moment as the city to go to in the papers and online, it looks proper cool.
"I don't look proper in the men's room," she said.
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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