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Discover LudwigThe phrase "tempestuous seas" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe rough, turbulent, or stormy ocean conditions, often in a metaphorical sense as well. Example: "The sailors braved the tempestuous seas, determined to reach their destination despite the raging storm."
Exact(8)
The markets of the future will be determined by the tempestuous seas of the future, not by the past.
And what about the story was compelling enough for you to quit your job, bid a temporary farewell to your family, and sail tempestuous seas?
Luminous skies, tempestuous seas, and peach-cheeked beauties dominate the offering of nineteenth-century paintings (mainly French and British) that follows, on Oct. 27.
We are an island nation, surrounded by often tempestuous seas and Winter's storms can be fierce and unforgiving.
I am the Way – Jesus walks on tempestuous seas surrounded by storm clouds.
But some are, and they know not what potentially tempestuous seas they've plunged into.
Similar(52)
At my feet, the leaves of wild leeks undulate like a tempestuous sea.
As we walked around the perimeter, we saw centuries-old temples quavering like a flotilla in a tempestuous sea.
"Christ on the Sea of Galilee," painted around 1963, could be the rendition of a tempestuous sea as darkness is about to descend upon the waves.
Where Ajax is described as sitting inside his tent with his mind like "a ship on a tempestuous sea", I totally throw out the nautical metaphor.
At dusk we can imagine the lonely, angry Grimes, accused of murder by the townspeople, stamping across the stones, torn between the scorn of "the borough" and the tempestuous sea.
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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