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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'there suggests a' is a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
It is used to suggest the existence of something, often an implication or a hint at something else. For example: There suggests a deeper motive for his actions.
Exact(4)
While gains by moderates and reformists in Friday's polls were most evident in the capital, Tehran, the sheer scale of the advances there suggests a legislature more friendly to the pragmatist Rouhani has emerged as a distinct possibility.
His delivery is subdued — the song is confided as much as sung — and the repetition of the line "You were always there" suggests a bewilderment, a stasis, a resistance to absorbing the loss.
Matting there suggests a runny nose because rabbits wipe their noses with their feet.
Elsewhere, "Something Great" applies Springsteen dynamics to routine fluff, while the careering new-wave guitar riff and cycling synth of "Why Don't We Go There" suggests a fancy for some of that Killers cred.
Similar(55)
The officials there suggested a high school equivalency program, but he was determined to get a high school diploma.
The woman there suggested a shiny gook you smear on your face to create the illusion of soft pink light dangling over your head.
But the statues and artwork that have been discovered there suggest a more luxurious use, perhaps as saltwater swimming pools, a noble dining area or a cult site.
Just after Christmas Mr. Lapine conducted a four-hour rehearsal with his cast, an afternoon of creative microsurgery: cutting a line here, timing a blackout there, suggesting a change in an actor's cadence.
More research is needed, but the wealth of experience already out there suggests there's a lot more waiting to be uncovered.
The clerk there suggested that a record of his birth might be kept in any of the 600 surrounding villages.
A military commander there suggested that might be an indication that fewer standard explosives are available.
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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