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Discover Ludwig"ramble about" is a perfectly valid phrase in written English.
You can use it when you want to express that someone is talking in an unfocused and disorganized way. For example: She began to ramble about her childhood memories.
Exact(40)
We'd go out to the countryside and ramble about, eat the terrible cake my mum had baked, then we'd drive back home and go our separate ways again.
Invariably, I ramble about the brevity of poems.
Waving his beer can, Jack went off into another ramble about the early church.
She quotes them at length, oral-history-style, making for a ramble about both humor and mortality.
He reads her Salinger stories, listens to her ramble about her memories, and zones out on a giant Gucci billboard of himself outside.
Anyway, our conversation, moderated by Bob Gibson, executive director of the University of Virginia's Sorensen Institute, turned out to be an amiable ramble about the Framers, the Constitution, the weaknesses and strengths of American political culture — things like that.
Similar(18)
In its first several years, ill-prepared entrepreneurs often rambled about obscure features and benefits, at times drowning their messages in technical jargon and amateurish presentations.
His incoherent rambling about team experiences from his grad student days reversed his entirely positive interview.
Whatever I was rambling on about, something about Willie.
Onstage, Mr. Clinton rambled about Neanderthals.
Well, with Tom Green rambling about nothing.
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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