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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'quite draw' is not a valid phrase in written English
If you meant to say something like "draw a conclusion" or "draw to a close", you would need to say that instead. For example: "After analyzing all the facts, we were able to quite draw our own conclusions."
Exact(3)
Why her? "We didn't quite draw straws," she says.
Even though your work is already published, a writer can never quite draw a line and accept that something is finished.
Josh also attempted to uncover what exact direction One Direction are headed, but didn't quite draw a conclusion, leaving him to suffer a neurotic breakdown in a room full of Post-it notes covered in paranoid scribbles.
Similar(57)
You are quite drawn to her".
She seemed quite drawn to Alice, whose gaze she held a long moment.
"He was smart and romantic, and I was quite drawn to him".
And I just started reading "The Great Gatsby," and find I'm quite drawn to the story line.
"I don't think he's quite drawing the ball like he used to, like he wants," Woods said.
First, do you agree with Mr Wolf in his assessment that if creditors are not made to face losses, nationalisation could be quite drawn out and expensive?
In the Evening Standard, Andrew Neather also found the book "laboured", and although "first-class entertainment... it never quite draws blood as truly dangerous satire should".
Although skeptical about much of what has lately counted as restaurant excellence, Wells hasn't quite drawn his own boundary line one defined, perhaps, by affability and chaos.
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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