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Discover Ludwig"niggle" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to mean "to cause minor but persistent annoyance to someone, to nitpick, or to find fault in minor details." For example, "The teacher kept niggling the students about their grammar mistakes."
Exact(60)
Now Philippa with the weather... Unless you think there's some kind of afterlife (in which case, think harder), the stark inevitability of death is a bit of a niggle.
You might have cashflow for one month, three months, six months, but there's always that niggle in the back of your head – what if it stops?
Scott would have mixed feelings about his side's fourth straight win, but his most pressing concern will be an update on defender Lachie Hansen's hip niggle.
Bravo then for the demonstrators, saviours, so it seemed, of the nation's honour.Yet a couple of problems surely niggle.
(And indeed the spelling: alright, yup, that's all right, "about 5% of the citations in the British National Corpus").One can niggle.
The outrage expressed by many other European Union governments when the coalition took power has for the most part looked misplaced.But it was precisely the new-found respectability of the Freedom Party's people in government that began to niggle Mr Haider, especially as his party's popularity, based largely on protest in opposition, started to slide.
They are the ones who, in 1964, plucked what has come to be known (unfairly in some eyes) as the Higgs boson from formulae they were working on to fix a niggle in quantum theory.
But some questions niggle at you, demanding an answer.
The first niggle is that most workers lost their state-provided health care and education almost a decade ago, after the reform of state-owned firms, so this cannot really explain why saving has continued to rise more recently.
Especially when you recall that health ministers are often weak figures in a cabinet; they can't hope to change everything.One other niggle.
Voter allegiances shift more readily in such conditions, affecting polls, and therefore poll aggregates, too.This niggle is compounded by technical considerations.
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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