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Discover Ludwig"pull records" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to obtain or retrieve information from a database or file system. You can use it in a variety of situations, such as: - "I need to pull records from the company's database to complete the report." - "The doctor will need to pull your medical records before your appointment." - "Can you help me pull the student records for the last school year?" - "The detective had to pull old case records to solve the mystery." - "We can easily pull customer records to track their purchasing history."
Exact(2)
Medical offices often put people on hold for extended periods while staff members pull records or make calls to insurers or other medical practices.
After we met, she would come into Village Oldies, the record store I worked in on Bleecker Street, and we'd drink a little beer on Saturday nights and pull records from the stacks and dance to them and hang out".
Similar(58)
MERS, industry executives hoped, would pull record-keeping into the Internet age, even as it privatized it.
DOE Green Energy Portal pulls records for renewable energy topics from the Energy Citations Database and the DOE patents database.
They pulled records on 35 searches performed by five troopers at the Cranbury station in Middlesex County.
So, rather than just pulling records, they were, in some cases, creating them retroactively and, at the same time, learning a lot about what Bruno was up to.
To get a better picture of this burgeoning pooch population's health in Britain, O'Neill and other researchers pulled records on all dogs treated at more than 300 clinics in 2013.
I stayed up all night working out the ideal segues, pulling records and dropping the needle just so.
Cindy Black, a retired federal agricultural technician, pulled records on the exact location of active and abandoned oil wells and their proximity to wildlife.
The owners said they pulled records after the city's reversal but could only find a "Request for Modification of Building Ordinances" dated Feb. 16, 1978.
They pulled records on 2,871 kids who participated in NHANES between 1988 and 1994, as well as 3,202 kids who were tracked between 2005 and 2010.
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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