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The phrase "sudden realisation" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used when describing a moment when someone suddenly understands or becomes aware of something. Example: "As she read the final line of the book, she had a sudden realisation about the true identity of the main character."
Exact(47)
No one is going to retire through a sudden realisation of the risks.
Then it was a sudden realisation that I didn't want a tragedy for the others.
It is gradual, and then it is a sudden realisation that becomes magically real: this house is now mine.
The murmur running through the press is the sudden realisation that what Germans call "political union" may be inevitable.
After a few seconds, one has a sudden realisation: "Oh, I know who that is," she exclaims.
There is pathos too in Redmayne's sudden realisation that, as a deposed king, "I have no name".
Similar(13)
Sudden realisations of what I might be missing aside, the first few days have been a cautious adjustment period.
In Lime Street station, the first familiar surroundings he had seen since the gale, an odd thing happened: he had a sudden, overwhelming realisation that he was alive, and started to cry.
But then, on a despairing whim, a sudden, bleak realisation that this is all nonsense, he simply throws the map and the papers away – they flutter off on the wind.
In that hospital room I had a sudden and powerful realisation that something had to change.
Deana Schupp, a cable company worker from Florida, stared out over the huge crowd on Washington DC's National Mall and had a sudden but welcome realisation.
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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