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Discover Ludwig"with emphasis" is correct and is commonly used in written English
You can use it to express that something was said or done in a powerful or meaningful way. For example, "She spoke with emphasis on the importance of getting a good night's sleep".
Exact(45)
They also reinforce the implications of the reworked fossil hall with emphases on interaction and interpretation.
Ensor practiced varieties of line that alternately congeal into solid matter and, thinning, dissolve into light, with emphases ranging from shouts to whispers.
She conducts interviews, edits them and plays them onstage through earphones to actors who don't learn lines but reproduce exactly what they hear, with emphases, pauses, slurring, hesitation, repetitions, gabbling, yammering, gulps and sneezes.
One of two things generally happened to make the music sound fresh: either the entire band seemed to be improvising all together, with emphases on one musician or another, controlled by the bandleader, or the music had become heavily arranged.
The actual chancellor of the exchequer wants Britain to "make things again", and espouses an economic vision that some describe as Germanic, with emphases on science, apprenticeships, regional enterprise zones, high-speed rail, and fiscal conservatism ahead of supply-side tax cuts.
This chapter provides a brief overview of biodiversity with emphases on natural products from marine microbial origin.
Similar(10)
With emphasis on "one".
"He was out!" Berra said with emphasis.
"Quality, drama," they both say, with emphasis.
"Gingerly," he said with emphasis.
"This feels good," he said with emphasis.
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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