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Discover Ludwig"tons of light" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a room or environment that is very bright. For example: "The living room was filled with tons of light."
Exact(10)
Mr. Yenal says his apartment is exceptional because it is 1,162 square feet, has "tons of light, a balcony," and is "very sort of peaceful".
The amount of oil is far smaller than a spill north of here in 1978, when the Amoco Cadiz dumped 220,000 tons of light fuel.
It is smaller, too, than the Exxon Valdez spill, which dumped 44,000 tons of light fuel off the coast of Alaska.
Not only did the place have that extra bathroom and a clean modern aesthetic bathed in tons of light, but it also represented the success he had always dreamed of achieving.
Under the agreement, which is renewed annually and was signed in Teheran a few days ago, Syria will also be provided with two million additional tons of light Iranian crude at cut-rate prices, the official Iranian press agency reported.
A renter was living there, and some fixing up was in order, prompting Mr. Minor to wonder, "Who Super Glues the windows shut?" But the apartment felt right, with tons of light, spacious rooms, a sizable kitchen and no doorman to whom to overexplain yourself.
Similar(50)
Keys, who wore makeup for the first time since last spring for the shoot, said her skin started breaking out at the beginning of her music career when "everyone covered me in makeup and then threw me under tons of lights". That made her "feel even more self-conscious, objectified and judged," inspiring her to make makeup less of a priority.
"We were blown away by how big it was," Ms. Rudnick said, "but it wasn't getting a ton of light".
When you look at a galaxy's center, you're going to see a ton of light, coming from all the matter located there.
If you are not familiar with high speed, a ton of light is needed and flicker is almost always a problem.
Of course, you'll need a ton of light, so most of these movies will be outside or at least in the daylight — this is a significant and technically insurmountable limitation but one worth mentioning.
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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