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Discover Ludwig"total bust" is correct and can be used in written English
This is an informal phrase and it can be used to describe something that has been a complete failure, especially a plan or idea. For example: "I thought my study plan would help me pass the test, but it was a total bust."
Exact(40)
Total bust".
The luckless pursuit, however, was not a total bust.
The evening wasn't a total bust: onstage, Ms. Grae estimated the attendance at about 40 people.
Quarterback Tony Graziani was also in that class, and he has been a total bust.
Former NSA officials say Trailblazer was not a total bust, that some elements survived and are still in use.
Even Luke Hochevar, a total bust as a starter, has found a home in the pen, and so all these Royals need to compete are a few runs.
Similar(20)
Call me crazy, but I thought the forecast for Snowquester was pretty good, as total busts and epic fiascos go.
A new documentary about Ursula K Le Guin shows the late author reflecting on the impact of feminism on her work, revealing that she had been "a woman pretending to think like a man" and that her much-loved Earthsea books "are a total complete bust" as feminist literature.
Total ball-busting devotion. .
Stubborn clouds that many feared would ruin the view parted — somewhat — in north Queensland, defying forecasts of a total eclipse-viewing bust and relieving spectators who had fanned out to glimpse the celestial phenomenon.
So door-busting may bust total household holiday spending.
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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