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The phrase "we were abolished" is grammatically correct but contextually unusual in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing the end of a group, organization, or practice, often in a historical or legal sense. Example: "After the new law was passed, we were abolished as a governing body, and our responsibilities were transferred to a new agency."
Exact(1)
Since we were abolished, the union PCS and our human resources team have done a brilliant job in dealing with Defra officials, who have often been slow to respond and lacking in sympathy.
Similar(59)
Whether we're abolishing them, merging them, I don't know.
"We are abolishing backdoor tip taxes and have supported weekly bin collections to help stop fly tipping and bin blight," he added.
"We're abolishing ambiguity," an MSNBC executive told advertisers at a recent corporate retreat.
A: That's one of about seven reasons courts would always tick off, "We're abolishing one or both of these torts because..."...
The synaptic Ca2+ transients that we observed were abolished by d-AP5 (Fig. 2B), but not CNQX, which is consistent with NMDARs acting as the trigger.
We note that SHAs were abolished in March 2013; however, we feel that SHAs remain a useful variable for a comparison of English regions.
We found that excitatory responses were abolished by this treatment with the exception of one unit.
Elections were abolished.
Barbarous medieval punishments were abolished.
The Diplock Courts were abolished in July 2007.
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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