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Discover LudwigThe phrase "always frequent" is not correct and is generally not usable in written English.
The term "always" implies a constant occurrence, while "frequent" suggests something that happens often but not all the time, creating a contradiction.
Example: "The trains are always frequent" would be incorrect; instead, you might say "The trains are frequent."
Alternatives: "consistently common" or "regularly occurring."
Exact(3)
"I always frequent local discount stores," Burkard says, citing his love for "vintage bootleg toys," which are apparently hard to find amongst crappy knock-offs and remakes.
If you always frequent the same store, then your style won't necessarily change.
It may be smart not to buy the absolute top-of-the-line processor, since upgrades are always frequent (if you purchased the right motherboard compatible too).
Similar(56)
He had to bid silently with bidding boxes, a device unknown at the Griffins Club that he has always frequented.
Small-business owners, many of them local, have always frequented one another's restaurants, shops and bars, even before the extra money started circulating.
Honoring the tradition of the fashionable women who have always frequented La Caravelle -- Babe Paley and the Duchess of Windsor among them -- they were dressed to the teeth, complete with the new bowling-ball bags, barely in stores yet.
Journalist pals, like the late David Halberstam, have always been frequent guests.
If readings of novels do tend to divide up along gender lines (and I believe that they do, indisputably, although there will always be frequent exceptions), it's easy to imagine that Life and Death of Harriett Frean would provide an easier reading experience for men than Pilgrimage does.
For the most part, using this trick was always something frequent fliers and travel agents were aware of, but not something the general public knew about.
During the follow-up period, pyuria was always more frequent in the control group than in the test group (see Fig. 1).
Terminal ramifications progressively spread at longer time points (Figure 2A), being always more frequent and extended in postnatal neurons, whose arbors eventually became 4.7 times larger than their embryonic counterparts (Figure 2C).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com