Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(1)
Exact(22)
Soon afterward paper manufacturing began in France and then in Germany and Italy, notably by Fabriano, whose enterprise was established in 1276.
What British companies and their audiences are missing is now being triumphantly demonstrated by the Guildhall School, whose enterprise continues to put its professional counterparts to shame.
March 1800 England December 14 , 1871London, England George Hudson, (born March 1800, York, Yorkshire, Eng. died Dec. 14, 1871, London), English financier, known as the "railway king," whose enterprise made York a major railway and commercial hub.
But that still does not explain how the United States, the international champion of free market competition, could decide to rig the catfish game to cut out the very Vietnamese farmers whose enterprise it had originally encouraged.
It was otherwise in Germany, where the Kaiser had fled and the old ways were discredited, or revolutionary Russia, whose enterprise was to remake mankind in a new image.
In "Iron Man 3," a story that the protagonist intermittently narrates, Tony Stark is a sort of independent start-up genius whose enterprise has grown beyond his dreams and out of his control; it's as if, from the very start of the story, he finds himself yoked to the service of his talent and not vice versa.
Similar(37)
The success of the company seems even more stellar when viewed in the context of a local industry whose enterprises tend to remain artisanal.
But that has not stopped one established restaurateur — Simon Oren, the impresario whose enterprises include Nice Matin, Sushi Samba and Five Napkin Burger — from betting that the potential will someday be realized.
In reality, France is divided: between those in the private sector who have long adapted to the market in their working lives, and those in the public sector who may accept globalisation as consumers in their free time but not while toiling at their desks.But what happens to former public-sector workers whose enterprises have been privatised?
Mr. Sloane, whose enterprises outside his successful business included a musical he helped write, "Tut, Tut, Tut," intended to showcase Michael Jackson as King Tut and Richard Pryor as a stuttering black Moses, remains one of the purer, most consistent and best-intentioned strains of the '60s gene extant.
He's more than a Nobel laureate -- he's a job-creator, after all, whose enterprises have directly employed tens of thousands.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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