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Discover LudwigThe phrase "make offer" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It is typically used to describe an action of making a proposal or suggestion for something, often in a negotiation or business context. Example: "I am interested in purchasing your car. Can you make me an offer?"
Exact(10)
Make offer.
REUTERS Chinese Firm Is Said to Make Offer for Gold Miner | The Shandong Gold Group, which controls China's largest gold miner, offered to buy Jaguar Mining for $785 million, or $9.30 a share, 73 percent above Jaguar's closing price on Tuesday, Bloomberg News reports.
REUTERS Time Warner Is Said to Make Offer for Dutch Television Company | Endemol, the deeply indebted Dutch television production company behind the show "Big Brother," said it had received an offer from Time Warner that valued the company at $1.4 billion, Reuters reports.
DealBook » Zell Is Said to Make Offer for Rival Firm | The real estate company Equity Residential, run by Sam Zell, has offered more than $2.5 billion in cash and stock for a 53 percent stake in a rival, Archstone, The Wall Street Journal reports.
— This town of 2,100 is a place long down on its luck, where the downtown is crumbling and half-empty, the textile jobs were shipped overseas years ago and a sign at a hardware store asks passers-by to "make offer".
At least the promise of sexual explicitness in Once and for All is cleverly undercut by the teenager who turns her Gorgon gaze on the audience and demands: "What are you staring at?" Jess Thorpe, the co-director of Junction 25, says that many of the images the company make offer uncomfortable viewing for adults.
Similar(49)
Make offers.
Asking price: Buyers will make offers in controlled-auction process.
Others make offers through third parties or by telephone.
In this algorithm, unemployed workers make offers to firms.
We make offers and let nature take its course".
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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