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The phrase "all be alright" is not correct in standard written English.
The correct form is "all will be alright," which can be used to express reassurance about a future situation.
Example: "Don't worry about the challenges ahead; everything will be alright in the end."
Alternatives: "everything will be fine" or "all will turn out well."
Exact(5)
You can't turn up at a temple six months before an election and hope it will all be alright.
We are told it will all be alright on the night".
Stop worrying so much, it will all be alright.
Maybe, just maybe, someday soon we will all be alright.
Run and chainsaw things, and it'll all be alright.
Similar(55)
As long as we keep thinking that the public needs education and all will be alright.
"Relax," they say, "it's all gonna be alright".
'It's all gonna be alright,' I say to myself.
Leave the Chinese government to its own devices and all will be alright in the end.
So pour in the shit, let's shrink the bastard and it's all gonna be alright.
The song, off sprawling album To Pimp a Butterfly, features lyrics about black people being killed at the hands of the police, and the mantra that through it all: "we gon' be alright".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com