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Discover Ludwig"utter control" is a correct phrase and is commonly used in written English.
It typically means complete control or authority over a situation. An example sentence might be: "The program gave me utter control over my finances."
Exact(19)
It's a macho thing, a feeling of utter control.
"We had complete and utter control," said Greg Schneider, The Post's national economy and business editor.
For eight episodes it held itself taut, every theme, character and motivation moving slowly and with utter control towards the conclusion.
In the first movement he tore into the vehement outburst when the violin enters, playing with searing intensity yet utter control.
And though the president looks straight into the camera with a gaze of utter control, he flicks a tear away from the side of his nose.
"In the last 20 years, artists have totally given up utter control of their work to galleries and curators," Mr. Galbreth said.
Similar(41)
Crikey, Derbyshire sounded great: prepared, lively, ready with statistics and humour to tackle politicians head-on, open to questions from the audience but able to silence them when needed – in utter and complete control.
The key to the win Sunday was Cummings' utter dominance on draw controls.
But Haryana's second-wicket pair appeared just as much in cruise control - without the utter dominance Kevin Pietersen enjoyed - as most of England's batsmen had yesterday.
That sudden utter loss of control was bad-dream material happening in waking life.
He specialises, with utter coolness and control, in twisting the knife in the psyche of his characters – and by extension that of his nation.
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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