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Discover Ludwig'stretchable' is a correct and usable word in written English
It is an adjective that means capable of being stretched or extended. Example: "The fabric of this shirt is very stretchable, allowing for a comfortable fit for people of all sizes."
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More of the converted electrical signal thus ends up in the air.Potential applications of flexible and stretchable carbon-nanotube loudspeakers include speakers on clothing, windows, flags, and video and laptop screens.
Chordophones have one or more stretchable strings attached to a frame or sound box; sound is produced by plucking, rubbing, striking, or bowing the string.
It is a superb conductor of heat and electricity, it is one of the most stretchable materials and yet is almost transparent.
The suit is made from durable, stretchable material, while the shirt is light and crease-resistant.
Graphene is highly stretchable, ultra-thin, non-toxic and very strong, so there is no doubting its commercial potential as a new kind of material for super-safe sheaths of the future, which you may not be able to feel or see.
{2} The North Face Pursuit Jacket This lightweight, stretchable and breathable jacket is ideal for adventures this spring and summer.
£40, cotswoldoutdoor.com {2} The North Face Pursuit Jacket This lightweight, stretchable and breathable jacket is ideal for adventures this spring and summer.
Reed becomes vastly stretchable at will; Johnny becomes a man of fire; Sue is englobed in a blue force bubble and becomes invisible; and, most pathetically, Ben becomes a rocky horror, the Thing, a mighty humanoid pile of stone whose adamantine strength comes at the price of his new, shapelessly massive, shattered, abrasive monstrous appearance.
We decided that any man's idea of the importance of his work, is in the end, stretchable, and that to augment the reality of a carrousel for children is, especially in these unreal times, essential.
Ambivalent and stretchable, he seems, all in all, a more interesting figure than Atticus Finch, the plaster saint for whom he provided the mold.
In "Tensile Involvement," the performers weave ribbons in a futuristic Maypole dance; in "Noumenon," they move inside stretchable fabric — Martha Graham's "Lamentation" meets "The Day the Earth Stood Still".
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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