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Discover Ludwig"ponders whether" is a correct and usable part of a sentence.
You can use it when you are describing someone who is carefully considering a specific dilemma or decision. Example: She pondered whether to pursue a career in medicine or law.
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Cassandra ponders whether his views seem from another planet to her fellow forecasters.
He ponders whether COP can deliver real change, and why smallscale farmers deserve our global attention.
Artist Gary Winters ponders whether he has had any negative reaction.
— Eric Asimov Time: Josh Ozersky ponders whether it's always a good thing when a chef says, "Have it my way".
Thus a prominent American commentator, in a magazine long associated with tolerance, ponders whether Muslims should be afforded constitutional freedoms.
The photojournalist heroine of Soli's Vietnam War novel ponders whether those who represent war merely replicate its violence.
Increasingly frustrated and downhearted, she ponders whether the time has come to rip up the entire IAAF as it stands.
Naturally, he belts love songs, but he also ponders whether Mexican culture can survive in a world of free trade.
But whatever frisson of bad-boy allure he may have, she also ponders whether he'd be capable of anything else.
On camera, Berger ponders whether cannibals — a "warrior tribe," as the narrator puts it — killed the islanders.
Republican aspirants are waiting eagerly, if politely, as Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina ponders whether he will retire.
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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