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Discover Ludwig"pull the tape" is a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
It is a common phrase that means to physically remove or draw out a strip of narrow material, usually adhesive, from a roll or dispenser. Example: Can you please pull the tape off of the box so we can open it?.
Exact(35)
He compares the reaction to a roll of adhesive tape: It's only when you pull the tape out from the roll that the sticky part is exposed and begins to attach to things.
When the distance between the tape and the substrate is zero, repulsive and attractive tractions balance to zero; in this segment, sliding of the tape relative to the substrate is forbidden when we pull the tape up somewhere in the middle, though we permit such sliding when the tape is peeled from one end.
There is a lot going on inside: a big battery, a big cassette and a big apparatus to pull the tape through.
"Some guys actually scream when I pull the tape off.
He can just pull the tape and rebroadcast his unheeded Democratic premonition.
Only for Crowe to then mistakenly pull the tape out of his bag during an urgent interview situation and record over the music!
Similar(25)
Pull the taping knife in one direction.
He pulled the tape out after a while and looked for another.
As she drove off with the children, Mr. Conde pulled the tape out of the camera.
Three men pulled the tape from one of the boxes to reveal newly packed sleeping bags.
The tape was causing discomfort, and she unraveled, slapping her legs and pulling the tape from her knees and crying.
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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