Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigDictionary
the arduously
adverb
In an arduous manner
Exact(2)
Modernism was the attempt to rescue the sincere, the truthful, the arduously achieved, from the plague of fake emotion.
One weekend I went to Livingston with my son Danny to help her pack and load our cars and begin the arduously task of moving her life from one place to another.
Similar(58)
Whilst I spent the majority of the time on the treadmill arduously pounding the miles away, he would make his way around the weight-training equipment.
As surfers claim, until the mid-70's, there were no paved roads south of Tijuana (the stretch from La Paz to Cabo via Todos seemed to have stayed unpaved until the mid-80's), which made the thousand-mile trip from the border arduously slow and surmountable only by four-wheel drives.
Like the best writing, Mr. Gaultier's clothes do not reveal the gears arduously turning in his head.
The recently, arduously concluded state budget compromise to close a $42 billion gap over 18 months caused by a combination of tax cuts, program expansions, and the economic crisis.
Most of the sauniers these days seem to be younger men who take pleasure in showing off their sweaty, lean, shirtless torsos as they rake and skim the salt, slowly, arduously, with the grace and ease of tango dancers.
And if senators try for the presidency (or less arduously, the vice presidency) based on records of accomplishment rather than on reputations of presumed charisma or rafts of media buzz, they will be better presidents if they get there and can have a sense of pride even if they don't.
On Sept. 12, the high court is poised to rule on the constitutionality of the fiscal pact arduously negotiated among European Union members that is the cornerstone of Ms. Merkel's plans.
Carter means Ukraine where the Russians are arduously working out the borders that were hastily drawn when the CIS was created in the aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union.
Such affectations have the potential to be either voluptuously pleasing (as they were in Michel Faber's "Crimson Petal and the White" and Sarah Dunant's "In the Company of the Courtesan") or arduously contrived (Elizabeth Kostova's "Historian").
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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