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Discover LudwigThe phrase "I often want" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to express a frequent desire or wish for something. Example: "I often want to travel to new countries and experience different cultures."
Exact(18)
But I often want to kill her.
I often want to say "met through work", which isn't necessarily the same as "worked with".
I don't like being imprisoned in an audience now, partly because I often want to go to the loo".
I am often too busy to eat at lunch so post-service I often want something hearty.
I often want to watch it, but I find it quite hard - I don't like soaps, reality TV or celebrity chefs.
I often want to grab someone's phone to throw as far as I can, and I am not even a check-out girl, just a passer-by," said another.
Similar(41)
As I've wondered lately about the future of ink and paper, I often wanted to reread those truths.
It has a limited Web browser, which does not make for the smoothest experience when you are trying to hop off to the Web to look up facts; something I often wanted to do when reading a historical novel.
"Nick said I often wanted to be bolder than I was, and as I've got older it's bothered me less what people think... I've been able to be much more outrageous, really".
As a (slightly eccentric) child I often wanted to be a monk – being a lapsed female Hindu, however, and the proud owner of a noisy and irreligious toddler, it's now unlikely I'll realise this ambition.
"What are you scared of?" I often wanted to ask.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com