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Discover Ludwig"such a stalker" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is usually used when referring to someone who is excessively obsessed/attached to someone else. For example: "He was such a stalker - I could barely go anywhere without him following me."
Exact(2)
"I'm obsessed with him, I'm such a stalker," she said, explaining that her older brother turned her on to Iggy Pop's band the Stooges when she was 10. "Iggy is one of the reasons I do music".
"O.M.G., he's totally stalking me!" "She's such a stalker".
Similar(58)
If all else fails, you may have to take legal action against the perpetrator!!! Beware that your perpetrator may be dangerous, such as a stalker, etc.
Geotagging information could potentially give someone intent on scaring you (such as a stalker) or a potential house thief the opportunity to know your exact whereabouts, particularly where you've cross-posted your check-ins on places such as Twitter and any other sites.
You can't even believe you dated such a desperate stalker.
Human locomotion and ventilation noise seem to have the potential to mask critical sounds in the environment, such as the footsteps and breathing of a stalker or prey.
For creative writing teachers, stalkers are such a basic condition of employment that, in the interest of full disclosure, they should probably be included in the job ad: Poor pay; negligible benefits (if any); and yes, you will be stalked.
Cinema buffs wear their familiarity with films such as Stalker and Tarr's seven-hour Sátántangó like a badge of honour and speak of them in reverential tones.
A stalker?
He is not a stalker.
'Then I got a stalker.
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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