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Discover Ludwig"Reader beware" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it as a warning to readers before introducing potentially controversial or difficult material that they should be aware of or be careful with. For example: "Reader beware: the following passage contains discussion of sensitive topics."
Exact(18)
"Reader beware," Valerie Martin warned here last year.
Pynchon ends his brief introduction to Against the Day with the words, "Let the reader beware.
One assumes that publishers believe that this same reader beware was applicable to several other books published recently.
Still, let the reader beware: those who read the notes instead of the book risk losing something in the reduction, as a few comparisons suggest.
It looks harmless enough, like a child's fantasy, inhabiting a fairy tale in which powerful, otherworldly forces are at work, but reader beware.
Reader, beware: moments of joy are few and far between in the teenage Janice's life as her story continues, and All Made Up opens with Cora (17 years her elder) headbutting her – not for the first time.
Similar(40)
But new readers beware.
To his left, carrying through on this brilliantly subversive, anticonsumerist message, is a 24-copy standing display that sternly warns, "Readers, Beware".
So again, readers beware of those distracters.
(This whole article is one big spoiler, so readers beware).
Heart Conditions -- For those coffee-naïve readers, beware of chasing the caffeine dragon if you suffer from hypertension (high blood pressure).
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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