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The phrase "actually doing alright" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express that someone is in a satisfactory or acceptable state, often in response to a question about their well-being.
Example: "Despite the challenges, I'm actually doing alright and managing to stay positive."
Alternatives: "truly doing fine" or "genuinely okay".
Exact(1)
In any case, suggests James, it doesn't make sense for people to bemoan the cost of living crisis, zero hours jobs, and poverty wages one minute, and the next to complain about some workers who are actually doing alright.
Similar(59)
I'll never actually tell you any of this though, because "Yeah, I'm doing alright, hanging in there, taking it one day at a time" is what you really want to hear.
Is he doing alright.
Of course, David Seaman was doing alright.
I hope Cam is doing alright.
I mean, Ben's doing alright isn't he?
It says: "I know you don't do much, but you're doing alright".
"I'm doing alright.
It is doing alright.
Most people here are doing alright," Newspaper editor Sergio Kiernan says.
So in English-speaking markets, it's doing alright.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com