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The phrase "make new words" is grammatically correct and usable in written English.
It could be used in a sentence to describe the act of creating or inventing new words. Example: The author's writing style is known for its creativity and playfulness, often making new words that perfectly convey the desired meaning.
Exact(3)
Not bad, and pretty entertaining throughout, especially if you tried to make new words out of the downs with the O', like 7 Down, which becomes SOR O'RAL.
Unlike English, in which morphemes combine to make new words (e.g., make + past = made, can also form making, makes, and so on), Chinese is an isolating language, in which elements of meaning are strung together as a series of isolated morphemes.
Continue shuffling tiles to make new words until time expires.
Similar(55)
Making new words is fun, and it's gratifying when they catch on with others.
Even the expert lexicographers at the Oxford English Dictionary, which famously includes "illustrative quotations" alongside its definitions, still put the definition and its needs first, making new words wait their turn to make it through the definition bottleneck.
Later, Pellerin told a meeting of the Anglo-American Paris Association in Paris: "English has always fascinated me because it's easy to create new words or join two words and make a new word".
To produce new words means to systematize the process of word-formation, to make it more regular.
We inherently view English as a malleable entity, quickly changing nouns into verbs (have you ever told someone to "Google that" or said "I'm going to Skype"?), squishing two words together to make new ones (see the Oxford Dictionaries for new official words such as "bromance," "guyliner," and "humblebrag"), and pulling new words out of thin air that clearly serve a desperate need ("selfie").
Then, other languages also use their own words to make new ones: in Russian, a neologism that has caught on is potolochnyj, which literally means "ceiling-ish" but refers to something poorly planned out, i.e., while gazing at the ceiling.
We make new stanzas using each others words, and the poetry unfolds, back and forth in a rhythm between poets.
The star of that saga is William Boyland Jr., who exemplifies all the reasons the words "state legislature" make New Yorkers want to beat their heads against the nearest flat surface.
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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