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Discover Ludwig"make willing" is a correct phrase and can be used in written English.
It means to cause someone to become willing or to persuade someone to do something. Example: The motivational speaker's words made the audience willing to take risks and pursue their dreams.
Exact(4)
Females of all species come equipped with "magnificent bazooms" and make willing bed-partners or comrades in arms, depending on the situation.
Camels, which were once pressed into service as unpaid labourers on Canarian farms, don't have to be belligerent; kit them out in a smart saddle and they make willing steeds for a stroll around the edge of the park.
Sheep have an agreeable disposition, and make willing [although somewhat rumbustious] experimental subjects.
For this purpose, patients are taught how to make willing contact with and tolerate the experience of pain or other distressing events that might appear, without attempts to control them [ 19].
Similar(56)
In order for Jesus to help, you need to be "willing to be made willing".
The forces that made willing-and-able straphangers out of budding bankers I assumed concurrently outmoded the necessity for a citizens' brigade.
They create passion and make you willing to write a check.
Voters' trust in Mr Key appeared to make them willing to give National the benefit of the doubt.
The Fed does not create Brazilian reals: but it may make investors willing to pay more for real-denominated assets.
Thus opioids make worms willing to search for food despite the high risk.
(Administrative nurse, Pub) It seems that more demanding tasks make ophthalmologists willing to work for the public sector.
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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