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'seemingly perennial' is correct and usable in written English
You can use 'seemingly perennial' when you want to express that something seems to remain consistent or unchanging. For example: "The problem of poverty in this region seems to be seemingly perennial."
Exact(12)
Shares, therefore, retreated as China's growth faltered and the seemingly perennial Greek implosion continued.
ARCHIE'S roller-coaster ride began in May 2009, when word leaked that this seemingly perennial bachelor would marry Veronica Lodge, one of his longtime love interests.
Many believe a quick fix to the seemingly perennial Greek problem had become necessary ahead of Britain's referendum on EU membership and a series of pivotal elections elsewhere.
But the swing patent has once again raised the seemingly perennial fear that something is terribly wrong at the Patent Office.
Froome may not like being the latest target for seemingly perennial suspicions, but, just as was the case with Sir Bradley Wiggins last year, the underlying issue, in fact, is much more complex.
In the seemingly perennial battle between producers of TV shows and the people who star in them, Don Johnson has notched a victory, quietly pocketing $19 million in a settlement with the company that produced his long-ago CBS crime series, "Nash Bridges".
Similar(46)
A hush fell over the punters as they stared at McCoy, a perennial winner with seemingly bottomless reserves of mental toughness and physical resilience.
Now he finds himself at the helm, having seemingly found an answer to the perennial question of why the Bears have so badly under achieved over the past decade at Twenty20 cricket.
The game pitted the perennial powerhouse Colts against the upstart Jets, a seemingly inferior opponent led by a brash young quarterback with dubious coiffure.
Wagner didn't remain such a libertine or a liberal, but this seemingly formulaic bel-canto score hints at several of his perennial obsessions.
In Stumbling on Happiness, Daniel Gilbert, a professor of psychology at Harvard, combines the latest scientific research, philosophy and case studies to examine the perennial human quest to be happy and our seemingly unerring failure to achieve it.
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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