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"rang the buzzer" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
It is typically used when describing someone pressing a button or buzzer to indicate their arrival or to call for entry or attention. Here is an example: "After waiting for several minutes, Emily finally rang the buzzer to be let into the building."
Exact(17)
One year, around Easter, a parish priest rang the buzzer and offered to bless my apartment.
In an ordinary street at an ordinary block I rang the buzzer.
At 9 p.m., a family rang the buzzer seeking a next-day wake for their 95-year-old grandmother who had just died at the family's apartment nearby.
But just as I raised my camera, I saw a shadow move, so I quickly crossed the street and rang the buzzer.
Arriving at the building's front entrance, I rang the buzzer, and a heavyset doorman came out, wearing the look of a bouncer accustomed to turning people away.
One midsummer evening not long ago, I rang the buzzer of a Holland Park mansion, wedding-cake white with black railings.
Similar(42)
I ring the buzzer, but there is no reply.
They had been told to ring the buzzer and wait for the doorman, who was strict: "No pictures.
When you ring the buzzer for apartment No. 7, nothing happens any longer, and won't, probably, until someone else moves in.
Please give me a chance to be a better mother to him.' " On Sunday, she will ring the buzzer again, as the guests arrive.
One night Laura and I were finishing the last of a cheap bottle of pinot noir when we heard someone ringing the buzzer of our building.
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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