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Discover LudwigThe phrase "able to heave" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone's physical capability to lift or throw something heavy.
Example: "The workers were able to heave the large crates onto the truck with great effort."
Alternatives: "capable of lifting" or "able to lift".
Exact(1)
Such a system will not be able to heave things onto shelves.
Similar(59)
The reactions have generated a heave pressure on the order of 500 kPa (10,000 pounds per square foot), but may be able to generate four times this pressure enough to heave foundations in a 5-story building.
At first glance, these workers are the Herculean heroes of this brave new world, able to balance and heave huge loads.
Arsène Wenger has struggled to heave his team to football's highest peaks in recent years but he is certainly able to occupy the moral high ground.
that caused me to heave in a bucket.
Sharon really starts to heave, really going for it.
It continued to shimmer, to heave and swell, to roll its waves, ancient, majestic, inscrutable, indifferent.
The highest peak seems to heave up in response to the stretching girl.
The displayed point absorber system consists of a buoy that is restricted to heave mode only.
Clouseau's open chest continues to heave with his breathing.
By using small stones on the bottom of the walls, the structures are more able to absorb frost heave, a geological process that occurs in cold weather.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com