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Discover LudwigThe phrase "transpire before" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that something occurs or becomes known prior to a certain point in time or event. Example: "The events that transpire before the main conflict set the stage for the story's climax."
Exact(4)
He added: "Mousey had built some really strong connections with housing workers and we were doing everything we could to encourage him off the streets, but unfortunately that didn't transpire before his death.
Some arrests are quick and predictable while others come as a surprise as authorities take time to 'gather information and get to know the person better.' "For others, they prepare a scenario and wait for certain things to transpire before playing out that scenario...They let the fruit ripen first and then pluck it," says Hakimzadeh.
Bachmann got in on Obama bashing too, saying that in past 18 months we've seen "nothing less than an economic coup transpire before our eyes".
In the model, the sensitivity of a screening test is determined by a (random) window period W with mean ω days that must transpire before a person infected at time 0 can be detected as infected.
Similar(54)
Although the play's eventual resolution may seem somewhat facile, what transpires before is a touching study in filial devotion, as brilliant people struggle against their fears of madness.
While this touching scene was transpiring before the cameras, Mitt Romney was somewhere in Florida.
But one cannot have amnesia about something that transpired before one's birth.
Supporters aside, the failure of authorities to appropriately control what was transpiring before their very eyes was a scandal.
More than 20 years after the first film appeared, Lucas began releasing a second trilogy of films depicting events that had transpired before those in the original series.
Since Fukuyama put a stop to history in 1989, he has dispensed himself from knowing anything about what transpired before that year.
What we have is a moment of pause, of reflection upon times past and several contradictory versions of what really transpired before the onscreen narrative commenced.
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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