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The phrase "will in any case" is correct and usable in written English.
This phrase typically means that something will happen regardless of the circumstances, and it can be used in the context of making plans or assumptions. For example, "We should plan for the worst, but will in any case be hoping for the best."
Exact(51)
It will, in any case, reward literal moviegoers, those hardy souls willing to switch off the flat screen, silence the cellphone and sit quietly in a roomful of strangers.
My sympathy will, in any case, be with the councils they challenge.
Some of them will, in any case, have left home and be living on the streets.
The issue will, in any case, be fought out in the marketplace.
The award will, in any case, be vastly reduced under Texas law.
Regarding those being evicted, you refer cavalierly to those "who will, in any case, be fully compensated" (editorial, June 24).
However, most potential issuers will be quite satisfied with the regime, which will, in any case, be reviewed in 2005.
Similar(4)
A deactivated variable definition will in any case not be available for use when composing a new template but can be used for displaying previously entered data.
Patients don't know what anything costs, and the bill will in any case be settled by a third party, so they don't haggle.
Yet, because this undifferentiated cosmic soup will be devoid of structures necessary for consciousness, the sense of time will in any case have vanished long since.
The fallout from that crisis means the EU will in any case have to be restructured.
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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