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Discover Ludwig"whose visit" is an acceptable phrase in written English.
You can use it to refer to the visit of a specified person or group. For example: "I was surprised by the number of people whose visit I enjoyed last week."
Exact(46)
It was a makeover fit for a king, Mohammed VI, whose visit, to inaugurate a new oncology wing, was later broadcast on national television.
You also neglect Sir John Clapham, whose visit to a hat factory in the 1920s inspired the great debates about imperfect competition and returns to scale in manufacturing.
Thole, whose visit to Walter Reed was his second, said of the soldiers he saw on Tuesday: "They're doing it practically for nothing.
"I was hoping it would be open," said Dorothy Bank, a retired kindergarten teacher from North Carolina whose visit to the city was about to end.
But like John, whose visit home is the occasion for the cocktails in "The Cocktail Hour," Mr. Gurney has lost patience with the rules.
But Mr. McCain, whose visit comes just before the 25th anniversary on Sunday of the end of the Vietnam War, said he wanted to show his son Jack.
Similar(12)
The patients whose visits were reviewed were 65 or older and had a range of incomes.
Rodman, whose visits are very much unofficial, says he believes in "basketball diplomacy".
Joe Torre, Bernie Williams and Roger Clemens, whose visits to ground zero let the workers know that the Yankees cared.
Many spectators were local residents or tourists whose visits happened to coincide with the pope's.
There are some artists whose visits to these shores one should try never to miss.
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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