Idiom
Take for granted.
If you take something for granted, you don't worry or think about it because you assume you will always have it.
Similar(8)
"For years straight people have been taking for granted the notion of watching a relationship on stage that's easily accessible to them," he said.
The reaction was revealing, since it took for granted the notion that climate change is a minor issue, a cause without real casualties, frivolous even.
The error in that line of thinking is that it took for granted this notion that there wouldn't be any sort of technological innovation in agriculture.
on Saturday for taking for granted the notion of a woman president, the bluntness of her language caught people off guard.
One thing that people take for granted is this notion of freedom of assembly, which I have never taken for granted because I come from a country where freedom of assembly is not granted.
No longer can it be presumed, certainly not taken for granted, that many canonical notions, even so-called "perennial" or "universal" issues, have the salience or global significance these issues have long been assumed to have.
Most retailers, for example, now take for granted the formerly radical notion that a store is not a building.
Developers are already envisioning pedestrian-friendly residential and commercial projects along Main Street in which residents would not need a car to get to work, a notion taken for granted in New York but almost unthinkable in Houston.
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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