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Discover Ludwig"my familiar" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English
It can be used to refer to someone or something that is well-known or close to you. The word "familiar" in this context can also indicate a level of comfort or intimacy with the person or object being described. Example: "I brought over my familiar blanket, the one I've had since I was a child, to keep me warm during the camping trip."
Exact(38)
Above all, where was my familiar, polemical narrator?
The selfish, mad cat lady inside me feels incomplete without my familiar.
I know I haven't long to enjoy the luxuries of privacy and silence, and I cherish my familiar surroundings.
But then I feel I matured a lot because I was completely removed from my familiar surroundings.
She was the only woman I'd known these past twelve years and more, my familiar.
That is not true of the convent: in my slightly spotty blue serge uniform, unrelieved by any good-conduct ribbon, I am my familiar self, younger.
Similar(19)
Serious jesters and unlikely heroes, complex evildoers and surprising friends--they are all my familiars.
I can speak freely, openly and happily with my familiars and perfect strangers about sex...but it is even easier on the radio.
"The book actually took me back to my childhood, my old familiar life, in a very nice way.
I embarked on the trip with one of my most familiar subjects, my partner Evan, days after we were married.
Benson's new album, My Old, Familiar Friend, is his first since those attacks and The Raconteurs' huge raising of his profile.
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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