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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a chase for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a pursuit or search for something, often in a figurative sense.
Example: "The movie revolves around a chase for the stolen treasure that leads the characters across several countries."
Alternatives: "a quest for" or "a search for".
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A decade ago, Barry Bonds carried the city on a chase for home runs.
"He's giving the old man a chase for his money.
The videos are "all different," Ms. Chaisson said, "but there's always a chase, for some reason".
Or are they just part of a chase for fat salary increases and juicy promotions?
Ultimately, it is — as both campaigns have said recently — a chase for enough delegates to clinch the nomination.
That would require quite a chase for some future Olympian to match, even more of a chase if he or she is not a swimmer or a gymnast.
Similar(19)
Disney uses that as a selling point with producers: When "Ernest Saves Christmas" needed a road for a chase scene, for example, Disney simply shut down its own roads.
Murray makes it 30-15 with a fantastic chase for a lob, which he spins on and hits a winner down the line past Raonic at the net.
The problem, named after the great French polymath Henri Poincar?has led mathematicians on a frustrating chase for a century.
Bye likes the L-39; he leased one as a chase plane for the Javelin's test flights.
You'll be amazed how little makes it home from a store after considering a pur- chase for thirty days.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com