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Discover Ludwig"ubiquitous" is a correct and usable word in written English
It is an adjective which means "existing or being everywhere at the same time". For example, you could say: "The technology of today is becoming increasingly ubiquitous."
Exact(58)
coverage to be ubiquitous for some time".
You would see ubiquitous "for sale" signs and a boarded-up resort.
Loafers in vivid shades and with fancy finishes were ubiquitous for next summer.
However misunderstood, Dickens has been ubiquitous for more than a year.
One investigator said the arrangements were "like putting money in a Swiss bank – they have become ubiquitous for the corrupt".
It has been ubiquitous for more than 20 years, so much so that we often fail to notice it.
Known for its camel, red and black check, the brand had become ubiquitous for cheap copies on market stalls around the world.
But as technology becomes ubiquitous for delivering content, those hard lines blur and you end up on a spectrum where it's not always clear," he says.
Smartphones have been ubiquitous for years, of course – but much more recently, there seems to have been a shift in social norms.
As a sticker on the bumper of the Western world, "the age of anxiety" has been ubiquitous for more than six decades now.
Mr. MacDonald's touch on the conga drums and dozens of other percussion instruments was ubiquitous for many years in pop music.
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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