Exact(15)
'Just win, baby!' -- The ubiquitous phrase that Davis used to inspire his team.
They were deemed, to use a now ubiquitous phrase, too big to fail.
People don't want, to coin the ubiquitous phrase, a "do-nothing" government.
Italy is, arguably, a matriarchical society – think of the Madonna and child, all those madres clutching babies in Neorealist cinema, the simple, ubiquitous phrase "mamma mia".
And then there is the ubiquitous phrase "I'm Shmacked," shouted by students on almost every video, usually with a glass or bottle feebly in hand.
The ubiquitous phrase "artificial strawberry flavour" gives little hint of the chemical wizardry and manufacturing skill that can make a highly processed food taste like a strawberry.
Similar(44)
Robert Capa's adage has become one of the most ubiquitous phrases in photography.
He used the now-ubiquitous phrase the "new normal" to reassure his audience that a lower GDP forecast of 7% was natural and would be in place for a few years.
"God willing," Mr. Jassim said at the auction, using the ubiquitous Arabic phrase that conveys patience, resignation and hope all at once, "everything is better right now".
The ubiquitous scholastic phrase per se, here rendered by "as such", is often, as here, a bit difficult to capture in English.
The ubiquitous and timeworn phrase "war on drugs" was used once again to describe the continuing efforts by the government and the public at large to address the problem of drug abuse among our nation's youth.
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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