Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(8)
"That was pure, unadulterated grief," Mr. Rather recalled.
"He took off very quickly, sort of jerked my head back," Mr. Rather recalled.
"She was beautiful, and had a smile as wide as Texas," Rather recalled.
Mr. Rather recalled that Sir Howard, suggesting the parade was for them, said over the noise, "When you give a luncheon, you give a luncheon".
As Mr. Rather recalled it, Sir Howard expressed surprise that Mr. Rather had come, then greeted him with a hug and said that it "demonstrated true friendship".
The dinner, Mr. Rather recalled, was hardly a gathering for the Upper East Side set; some guests wore traditional Welsh hats.
Similar(52)
Using squares of corrugated cardboard, Mr. Della Vecchi has built a whimsical but substantial piece of serendipitous, undulating architecture that rather recalls the spirit of Antonio Gaudi.
Rather recalls that his father was so loyal to his employer, Humble Pipeline, that he refused to frequent any other company's gas station.
By its material and its point of view, it rather recalls Christopher Isherwood's "Goodbye to Berlin," but it is more poetic in treatment and more general in implication.
The very title suggests as much: it isn't "Women," or "Young Women," or even "Grrlz," but, rather, recalls Marlo Thomas's "That Girl" and hints that, if there's a passage to be made to womanhood, it isn't biological but professional, emotional, and, above all, financial — by which standard the show's quartet of women under twenty-five have yet to make the grade.
The very title suggests as much: it isn't "Women," or "Young Women," or even "Grrlz," but, rather, recalls Marlo Thomas's "That Girl" and hints that, if there's a passage to be made to womanhood, it isn't biological but professional, emotional, and, above all, financial by which standard the show's quartet of women under twenty-five have yet to make the grade.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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