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The phrase "all took on" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that a group of people accepted or assumed a responsibility, role, or challenge.
Example: "As the project deadline approached, all took on additional tasks to ensure its success."
Alternatives: "all assumed" or "all accepted".
Exact(17)
He and his friends, anti-Stalinists all, took on the party leadership and were duly expelled from the youth league.
Those 691 families all took on their responsibilities at the dawn of a new era of debt, one that was not only deregulated but also seemingly deranged.
The calendar, the economy and coinage, the temples, all took on new directions.
It all took on aspects of a modern-day fairy tale to this little lady frMm the Bronx.
But the cavernous acoustics of the church clinched the issue: everything — the symphony, most of all — took on a reverberant, impressionistic haze.
And the show, with its Venice Beach tropical patterns; bright red, pink and royal blue colors; and the rocker "hello Versace!" embroideries all took on a 21st century look that is giving Mr. Puglisi a real buzz in Milan.
Similar(43)
But Serra says that within around 15 years they will all take on a deep almost black tone.
Thanks to either window grime or smog, city days all take on a gray oneness.
The old labor battle cry "An injury to one is an injury to all" takes on new meaning.
He is, after all, taking on not some modest Baroque trumpet concerto but a cornet part typically regarded with dread.
He is, after all, taking on death.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com