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Discover LudwigThe phrase "ready mood" is not a commonly used or grammatically correct phrase in standard English.
Instead, the term "ready" is typically used as an adjective to describe a person, object, or situation that is prepared or prepared to do something. Some possible sentences using "ready" as an adjective are: - I'm in a ready state of mind for the big presentation tomorrow. - The students were in a ready position to start the race. - Our team is ready to take on the challenge. - She always keeps her workspace ready for any task that comes her way. In all of these examples, "ready" is being used to describe a state or condition of being prepared. However, it would not be grammatically correct or make sense to use "ready mood" in these sentences. The term "mood" typically refers to a person's emotional state, and does not fit with the idea of being prepared. For example, it would not make sense to say "I'm in a ready mood for the big presentation tomorrow." If you are looking to express the idea of being prepared or ready in a more emotional or psychological sense, you could use the term "readiness" instead. Some correct and natural-sounding sentences with "readiness.
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The connections between past and present feel tenuous, and the Oprah-ready mood of uplift is tainted with a strain of cuteness (Holden).
Everyone headed to Frankfurt this year in a great mood, ready to make some big deals.
Every time he starts on the trip, he feels in a gay mood, ready for the wide open spaces and wonderful countryside.
With his new band, the Cardinals, his songs are kindly and lovelorn and he's in a Grateful Dead mood, ready to jam.
The next afternoon, sitting in the bar of the Majestic hotel in Cannes, Karina is in playful mood, ready to talk about her relationship with Godard.
But the BBC is now in a different mood, ready to open a channel for direct communication with audiences and to reduce the importance of the mediation of the public's responses.
With three score years and ten behind him, Heaney is in a quasi-mystical mood, ready to take stock of his life and to address the question of growing old as a poet.
I have seen the three movies that Neil LaBute has directed from his own material—"In the Company of Men" (1997), "Your Friends & Neighbors" (1998), and the new "The Shape of Things"—and I have emerged from all three in a foul mood, ready to stomp a pooch or knock down an old lady.
So when Michel Gondry was ready to shoot Mood Indigo, his whimsical adaptation of Boris Vian's 1947 novel, Froth on the Daydream, how did he ask her to play the part of Chloé?
Yet there were always journalists ready to ease the mood.
With a jukebox in your pocket, a suitable tune is always at the ready, no matter your mood.
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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