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Discover Ludwig"pervasive force" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used to describe an influence that pervades or dominates an area, situation, or atmosphere. For example: "The pervasive force of technology in our modern lives is undeniable."
Exact(19)
And it's hard for that pervasive force to think outside of itself".
The influence of Boswell's work penetrated throughout the world and, despite the development of new attitudes in biographical literature, has persisted to this day as a pervasive force.
Like nearly every other movie that tries to confront that elusive, pervasive force head on, this one quickly loses track of what it is talking about.
I felt the pervasive force of teargas hit my eyes first and linger at the back of my throat for hours.
Religion was a pervasive force in Meso-American life, as the art demonstrates; and considerable surplus energy was devoted to it (e.g., temple construction, support of a numerous professional priesthood).
What if, rather than being a means of empowerment — whereby a young woman is no longer subject to anything so quaintly analog as the ticking of a biological clock — freezing one's eggs is understood as a surrender to the larger, more invisibly pervasive force of corporate control?
Similar(39)
The suit was described by The New York Times as groundbreaking, attacking "what fair housing advocates regard as one of the most sinister and pervasive forces in the suburban housing market: the practice of racial steering".
In Drosophila many experiments suggest that an individual cell's polarity is not imposed by pervasive forces but depends, locally, on its interactions with its neighbours.
Although the overwhelming majority of genes found in angiosperms are members of gene families, and both gene- and genome-duplication are pervasive forces in plant genomes, some genes are sufficiently distinct from all other genes in a genome that they can be operationally defined as 'single copy'.
There was also a belief in a shadow self, or immaterial soul (tipo), that after death eventually was merged into a vague entity called jok, a pervasive power, or supreme force.
Other studies have looked at the pervasive evolutionary force of HIV-1 recombination in vivo [ 18] and its effect on the emergence of drug-resistance [ 19, 20].
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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