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The phrase "accelerates for a" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are describing an increase in speed or intensity for a specific purpose or duration.
Example: "The engine accelerates for a brief moment before reaching its maximum speed."
Alternatives: "speeds up for a" or "increases for a".
Exact(3)
In fact, don't be surprised if economic growth actually accelerates for a couple of years".
Typically, sales yield for a new product starts out slowly, accelerates for a while, and then flattens out as the product matures, in a classic S-shape curve.
Music is similarly scored to manipulate us emotionally, as when dark chromatic chords are orchestrated to reinforce our apprehension of an ominous setting or a loathsome character, while a lush string section heightens a romantic interlude, or a tempo accelerates for a scene of imminent crisis.
Similar(57)
No one can accelerate for a full 100 meters.
A free electron will be accelerated for a while but will then collide with an ion.
Britain's appetite for new cars was unwavering in July, with sales accelerating for a 29th month, prompting a second upward revision to the full-year forecast.
This required getting on the highway, and I found it satisfying, accelerating for a short while along the empty, impersonal road.
Finally, strong electrostatic forces are not sufficient solely to loft the dust particles to higher altitudes since a charged dust requires accelerating for a proper time and distance in the electron sheath.
That process has been accelerating for a while now.
The craft apparently shut down after its thrusters began to accelerate for a final approach.
So the search has suddenly accelerated for a way to keep Kyoto alive.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com