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Discover Ludwig"worried face" can be used in written English.
It is typically used in informal contexts to describe someone's facial expression or describe an emoticon which expresses worry or fear. For example: Sarah saw her teacher scowling and had a worried face on her own.
Exact(19)
(Worried face).
(Worried face, and angry face, followed by WTF face).
It was Bob — a tall, gaunt man of about thirty with a worried face.
"Inhale," suggested Sorrentino's translator, Michael Moore, a partly bald man with a worried face.
She stroked his grizzled, worried face with the gentle hand of a girl about to give a horse a sugar cube.
She thought she was just going home for the weekend, but one look at her father's worried face persuaded her to stay.
Similar(41)
But ask anyone what can be expected and you will see worried faces.
When Martin fell to the floor in a heap, turning his left ankle after making a layup to start the third quarter, a hush came over the crowd, and there were worried faces on the Nets' bench.
Next thing I knew worried faces were hovered over me, my daughter's stricken, horrified.
It feels uncomfortable when the people around you don't share enthusiasm for the one thing you're excited about even worse if they make worried faces when you bring it up.
It feels uncomfortable when the people around you don't share your enthusiasm for the one thing you're excited about even worse if they make worried faces when you bring it up.
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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