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Discover LudwigThe phrase "utterly present" is a correct and usable expression in written English.
It is usually used to describe something which is not only present but is fully and completely present. For example, one could say "His attention was utterly present, never wavering from the task at hand."
Exact(6)
"He was fascinated by people and ideas and utterly present as a friend".
Your eyes may start watering and your nose may begin to run, but you'll also feel utterly present, incredibly relaxed, and highly alert.
It's an imperfect film; it's somewhat chaotic and sometimes simply ordinary in its execution; but its loose ends suggest remarkable possibilities that are both science-fiction-like and yet utterly present at hand.
Ms. Chipaumire and Mr. Bendongué — both utterly present and compelling — fold and unfold their bodies amid a flower-strewn landscape, sometimes coming together, but more often keeping apart in a surreal, poetic world of memory and infinite time.
The classic reasons that people have dogs — to feel loved unconditionally, and not for our appearance or net worth; to escape the knowledge of death for a moment with a creature who doesn't know about its existence; to have access to utterly present joy — are only intellectual concepts in the face of this squealing lunatic.
My usual adventurous self gladly took a back seat to be totally and utterly present for who I needed to be for her, her recovery, and really overwhelming life transition.
Similar(54)
But perhaps the most utterly despised present is the office "humour" books, from the You Don't Have To Be Mad To Work Here, But... stable.
He treats everything with an utterly absorbing present-tense vividness, which this book lets us view through grown-up eyes.
Frontex is at present utterly dependent for staff and equipment on pledges from national governments, which have repeatedly promised to increase resources but generally failed to follow through.
So Mexico's war is how the future will look, because it belongs not in the 19th century with wars of empire, or the 20th with wars of ideology, race and religion – but utterly in a present to which the global economy is committed, and to a zeitgeist of frenzied materialism we adamantly refuse to temper: it is the inevitable war of capitalism gone mad.
MT: They are models of integrity, unaffected beauty, being utterly in the present, stoic about pain, and tirelessly pursue their tasks without self-regulation.
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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