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Discover Ludwig'rudiments' is a correct and usable word in written English
It is primarily used to refer to basic skills or knowledge of a particular subject. For example: "The student was able to demonstrate a strong understanding of the rudiments of mathematics."
Dictionary
rudiments
noun
Plural of rudiment
Exact(60)
The rudiments of the new Scotland bill confirmed in the Queen's speech, including powers to raise 40% of taxes and decide about 60% of public spending, appear to follow faithfully the draft legislation laid out by David Cameron in Edinburgh in January.
The city has all the rudiments of Jewish life, with many working synagogues, Jewish schools, and a kosher butcher and cake shop.
At any rate, she has not yet put in place even the rudiments of a campaign team, having only just hired a chief of staff to co-ordinate her political activities.Mike Huckabee, a former governor of Arkansas and the runner-up in the primaries of 2008, is also coy about his plans.
He had learnt the rudiments of music from a nun at a boarding school where he was placed after his father was killed in the first world war.
Mr Gigerenzer argues that being risk savvy is important if people are to protect themselves from being manipulated by politicians, doctors, financial advisers and others who claim to be looking out for their best interests.Being risk savvy is about more than understanding the rudiments of probability theory and human psychology.
The West has viewed Mr Yeltsin as its best ally in Russia, because he has respected the rudiments of democracy.
Given normal rains, relatively free husbandry and the rudiments of commercial transport, almost every country in sparsely populated Africa could amply feed its own people.
Unless the rudiments of government and a modern economy can be swiftly set up, both problems will only get worse.
A trainer then helped the patient to perform a stepping motion by extending his leg, placing his foot on the treadmill, retracting it, and so on.Over the course of a few months, all seven patients developed the rudiments of walking.
Yet at the annual meeting of the National Neurotrauma Society in Los Angeles this month, Susan Harkema of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), described how seven of her patients whose spinal cords had been completely cut through were able to relearn the rudiments of walking.Dr Harkema's research suggests that the cord plays a bigger role in locomotion than was previously believed.
Millions of otherwise deprived children have learnt at least the rudiments of knowledge how to count and spell by watching "Sesame Street", an American television show that Mr Stone helped to create.
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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