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Discover Ludwig"come" is a correct and usable word in written English
It is often used as an imperative verb in order to give an order or request someone to come to a certain place. For example: "Come to me at once!"
Exact(9)
A continuous crowd of students come & go.
Roses come & go; the changeover is rapid.
They seldom move, they stay moored to the bank, and the tenants come & go by land or by shikaras, or taxi gondolas.
After Waldheim fell to the Russians, both prisons had been left unguarded & they had been free to come & go as they pleased, but the road west was blocked by Soviet sentries.
But when he dived into a run of songs from "Curtis" and its underwhelming predecessor, "The Massacre," audience interest seemed to wax and wane: low on "Come & Go" and "I'll Still Kill," high on "What Up Gangsta" and "I Get Money," perhaps the scrappiest song ever about wealth accumulation.
She said 160,000 people a day come & go in Rockefeller Center, and if all the people who worked there called it home, they would form a community that would rank 63rd in the U.S. Guide announced that they would then take the fastest semi-automatic elevators in the world up to the observation tower.
Similar(51)
She came & went as she pleased.
You're just completely controlled by work -- just come, go, come, go -- that you don't have time for yourself and your religious self.
Eddie: -they want them to come go- go- go right.
Varicose vein treatments come and go.
Goals come and go.
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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