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The phrase "always in kind" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express that something is consistently reciprocated in a similar manner or form.
Example: "She always treats her friends with kindness, and they respond to her always in kind."
Alternatives: "reciprocated with kindness" or "returned in kind."
Exact(1)
"My answer to that was always, in kind of a joking way, well, John is the way he is because we were too strict with him".
Similar(59)
"I know well that the devil is always in the details in this kind of negotiation".
When an equity-ETF gets a redemption request, it is almost always an in-kind redemption.
His customers — who were men, as women back then kept their hair long — always paid in kind, usually grain and vegetables.
Most of the papers have two or three such reviews, and the authors almost always respond in kind, with substantive discussion and, often, counter-arguments.
We evangelicals, however, have not always responded in kind.
But the devil in nutrition studies is always in the kind of details that are encapsulated by phrases like "sort of". Whether the evidence was invaluable, as the N.I.H. claimed, depends on a number of issues.
Players burst through and disappear behind them, always in a kind of "Noises Off" rhythm.
At 9 15, the old Chinese couple, always in some kind of pickle, march by single-file.
We were always in the kind of raw setting, where all you can be is humble and honest, and so we got to know and appreciate each other for who we really are".
But as RuPaul says, everyone is always in some kind of drag.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com