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Discover Ludwig"stood off from" is correct and usable in written English.
It is used to describe a situation in which two sides are keeping each other at a distance. For example, "The two sides stood off from one another, refusing to cooperate."
Exact(1)
After requesting assistance from the CSC, Point Grey stood off from the trawler until arrived on scene.
Similar(58)
Fundamentalist societies leave us rather baffled and we tend to stand off from them.
Accordingly, there was a tendency to equip aircraft with long-range guided weapons that would enable them to "stand off" from antiaircraft defenses, and these weapons were used to great effect against Iraq in 1991 in the Persian Gulf war.
A Silurian chain of volcanic islands stood off the Laurentian craton, stretching from the Klamath Mountains of northern California to Alaska.
For some reason, we always walked around it along the right-field side, never the other way, and each time I would wonder about the oddly arrayed ticket kiosks (General Admission fifty-five cents; Reserved Grandstand a dollar ten) that stood off at such a distance from the gates.
Waddle decided that it would be safer to stand off the submarine from the group of survivors and wait for assistance to arrive.
The adjustable gantry allows for both heads to be attached at the same time and the FORS heads have a stand off from the object surface of 8 cm (visible) and 4 cm (infrared).
The Association aims to engage the Federal government on measures to mitigate similar armed stand-offs from happening again, through "education, mitigation and implementation".
The stand-off from Goroka scored Huddersfield's first try in the 46th minute to cut London's 12-0 half-time leand and injected desperately needed enthusiasm into a team which is understandably short of confidence.
Across the country, the government reckons that 2,000 people on average sleep rough a night, and 10,000 in total in a year.In this section Off the street Change of address In loco parentis New Labour, old story Ulster's perilous stand-off From Beaverbrook to Blair Third time lucky?
The paper preached an often eccentric blend of imperial-minded, no-nonsense brand of Conservatism, and it remained one of Mrs Thatcher's staunchest cheerleaders throughout the 1980s.In this section Off the street Change of address In loco parentis New Labour, old story Ulster's perilous stand-off From Beaverbrook to Blair Third time lucky?
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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