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Discover LudwigThe phrase "so invited" is not standard in written English and may cause confusion.
It could be used in informal contexts to imply that someone is invited in a casual or lighthearted manner, but it is not commonly accepted. Example: "If you're free this weekend, you're so invited to the party at my place!"
Exact(17)
Mrs. Boggs championed racial justice at a time when doing so invited the resentment if not hostility of most Southern whites.
Living here was the goal of all thinking people, and doing so invited complication in nearly every respect; sacrifices were to be made.
Officials at the Walker Art Center had long wanted Ms. Sze to create something for them and so invited her to visit the museum in July.
We want to bring this history right up to the present day, and so invited four experts in scientific publishing to discuss the present and future of the learned journal.
Surrounded by people and yet alone, Garima closed her eyes and allowed herself to steep in her pain – and in doing so invited her observers to insert themselves into that comforting and familiar space of rumination without resolution.
Ecuador's embassy is not large and the room in which the press conference was to be held would accommodate no more than 15 or so invited journalists, and that at a crush.
Similar(42)
So, invite her.
To do so invites a kind of double jeopardy.
So invite your boss and his girlfriend to dinner.
The question is still open to comment, so invite them to post if they like.
So invite some friends, head out into the garden and open the year's first bottle of rosé.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com