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Discover LudwigThe phrase "which realised" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to something that has been made real or brought into existence, often in a context discussing ideas, plans, or concepts. Example: "The project was a success, which realised our vision of a sustainable community."
Exact(9)
Fans might remember with heavy heart The Invasion of Time from 1975, which realised the Tardis's vast expanses as a series of drab hospital corridors.
Sotheby's evening sale contained no examples of his work, but Christie's put three Hirsts on the block, including a pristine 1994 spot painting (pictured here), which realised £881,250.
It was introduced by an American charity called Conservation International, which realised the going rate for logging concessions was often so low that it could afford to outbid the foresters.
Last year, he released an acclaimed first solo album, The Messenger, which realised his quest to make music that was "vivacious and exuberant and shiny", something he felt was sadly lacking in the mainstream.
Like Radical Essex, Estuary is supported by the Arts Council, which realised a decade ago that south Essex was lacking the kind of cultural infrastructure you might find in other British regions.
It was Microsoft itself which realised that it was not complying with the directive after the release of SP1, a major update to Windows 7 released in February 2011.
Similar(51)
We set this nominal experiment-wise level of significance, α, to 5% and employed the α-spending function α t = αt [10], where t and α t denote the proportion of accumulated information and the significance level to which the realised P value is to be compared with at a particular analysis time point, respectively.
We adopt a model in which the realised relationship is continuous over the genome and with trait effects that are uniformly distributed across the genome.
Which is finely realised in Luc Bondy's perfect melding of Ancient Greek and modern Brit.
By the end of the lesson, I've come down a hill, slowly, and generally none of my worst fears are realised, which makes it a fairly good day.
Near the end, after a shopping spree with the woman who, it turns out, is her husband's lover, she decides to ask him to leave and walks back into their flat, a woebegone shopper, holding her expensive carrier bag by one handle – nicely suggesting her loosening hold on life and the sort of detail of which this meticulously realised production is full.
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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