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The phrase "again bending" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe the action of bending something once more or repeatedly.
Example: "After a long day of work, she found herself again bending over backwards to meet the demands of her boss."
Alternatives: "bending once more" or "bending again".
Exact(5)
But Sangakkara makes amends next ball, again bending the knee and again lasering a drive through cover.
There is more mad-swan movement from the dancers (in white again), bending over one another, pecking at bodies, elbows up and shoulder blades pushed out, and then finally (finally!) the black-pants and white-pants men find wholeness by accepting the otherness of the other.
Slowly the home side regained their composure and Miller went close again, bending his shot just the wrong side of Green's left-hand post as the home side caught West Ham on the break.
Still on toe, her breath going quickly in and out of her mouth, and so much sweat on her brow that it began forming small beads, at that moment, she twirled again, bending alternately forward and backward at the waist.
When I ask Reeve where he got it, he replies that it was from a New Orleans policeman, one of the very same folks, he tells us (again bending the truth), who abandoned their posts during the flood and "went home to take care of their families".
Similar(52)
She again bent her rules and, seamlessly, they found that they were dating again.
I spent seven weeks recuperating last summer, and time once again bent in weird ways.
At the city of Jhelum the river turns southwestward along the Salt Range to Khushab, where it again bends south to join the Chenab River near Trimmu.
Near Bassano the river again bends southward and, after a course of 365 miles (587 km), joins the Oldman River 37 miles (60 km) west of Medicine Hat to form the South Saskatchewan River.
"It shouldn't matter whether it's a machine or a human doing the copying and reading, especially when behind the machine stands a multi-billion dollar corporation which has time and again bent over backwards devising ways to monetise creative content without compensating the creators of that content".
Not content with having organised the competition during the rainy season, when Duckworth-Lewis will make more headlines than any player, the ICC has once again bent over backwards – easier when you don't have much of a spine – to please cricket's financial powerhouses.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com