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Discover Ludwig"wedged with" is a correct phrase in written English.
You can use it to describe a physical object that has something else stuck between it and another object. For example: "The door was wedged with a stick, making it impossible to open."
Exact(4)
He emerges, gasping, in a ghostly cenote, a sinkhole in the Mexican jungle fringed with broken coral, wedged with human bones: a place of sacrifice and buried remembrance.
For me, the main problem isn't Ross's relationship with the Conservative party, or even the alleged tax-avoiding practices of Ross and Hoare's current or past business interests, though I must admit I'm not thrilled to see the highest ranks of public life wedged with people who don't appear to understand the point of tax.
This certainty has gone missing from conversations elsewhere: a banking scandal always comes garnished with people arguing that the financial sector is so wedged with talent that it should be unleashed from moral codes, the better to dazzle us with its heady ambitions.
The tibia stands orthogonally upon the talus, which is moderately wedged, with a mediolaterally flat trochlea having medial and lateral margins at even height, a form distinct from the strong keeling seen in OH 8 (H. habilis) and several tali from Koobi Fora.
Similar(56)
I wedged it loose with my ass".
Each condo unit is wedge-shaped with rounded balconies.
Roasted potato wedges with smoked paprika.
Iceberg wedges with blue-cheese dressing.
Wrap persimmon wedges with prosciutto and secure with toothpicks.
"It gives Coleman a wedge with key audiences".
Serve cut into wedges, with plenty of butter.
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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