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The phrase "I do longer" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "I no longer"? You can use "I no longer" to indicate that you have stopped doing something or that something is no longer the case. Example: "I no longer work at that company; I found a new job."
Exact(1)
Each day I get up at 6.30am to train and at weekends I do longer bicycle rides.
Similar(59)
My place has been listed since 2012, when Ben and I started doing longer work trips abroad.
I've done longer comedy festivals like Adelaide, Aspen and Edinburgh, but this is a one-day power fest.
If I do it longer than that, I'm pretty sure Amy will divorce me.
So I was doing longer-term planning for a greener world".
I feel I do not any longer own myself.
I had long thought competitive weight lifting a pointless sport, but I don't any longer.
"Soon, the type of work I do will no longer be possible," Larson says.
"I do like it longer," he said, repeating it for emphasis.
I don't any longer.
end{aligned} (1.8) Clearly, the functional I does no longer satisfy (1.6), since it contains two nonlocal terms.
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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