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Discover Ludwig"regain fame" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to regain or recapture one's previous level of public recognition or notoriety. Example: After years of struggling in obscurity, the musician's latest hit album helped him to regain fame and popularity in the music industry.
Exact(1)
Convinced that it is his ticket to regain fame, Tex accepts Glenda's suggestion to share the bill with Deke, after which she calls reporters of The Dallas Chronicle to write a story on Deke.
Similar(59)
Having sparred with De Niro in Once Upon A Time In America, she spent time as a Chiswick housewife before regaining fame as Lady Cora in Downton Abbey.
Images flash by, with newspapers proclaiming her innocence and that Gaga is back in the spotlight and has regained her fame.
We'll walk to reject the petty and sniveling racism of Carlson and Coulter and the other pathetic fading figures fighting to regain their lost fame in the traces of the Martin family's tears.
To monetize his fame and regain liquidity Twain undertook took a year-long speaking voyage.
Help us regain our world-wide fame as a free and prosperous land.
Babitsky acquired fame for his extraordinary and fearless reporting from Chechnya during the two wars fought by Russia to regain control of the republic.
No amount of fame immunizes us from the feeling that a great slice of pizza is the only way to regain equilibrium after an exhausting day.
Will he regain consciousness?
I regain my composure.
Could she regain her fitness?
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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