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Discover LudwigThe phrase "always in movement" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is constantly changing or in a state of flux.
Example: "The world around us is always in movement, adapting to new challenges and opportunities."
Alternatives: "constantly in motion" or "perpetually changing".
Exact(6)
He's always in movement".
And we're always in movement.
The eye is always in movement.
"As Tina, Angela was always in movement," Mr. Rissient said.
"Peronism is like a river in movement, it is the river itself and at the same time it is not the same because it is always in movement," Carlos Corach, a former minister of the interior and close associate of Mr. Menem, said recently.
The musical process is always in movement and recordings are like pictures of that process".
Similar(54)
"I was always interested in movement," he said, "but I knew I didn't want to devote myself exclusively to dance.
Often the target of discrimination and cynicism based on her gender, even within the movement she helped found – "Sí se puede" is still often incorrectly attributed to Chavez – Huerta at the end of her life is standing up for her legacy and the legacy of women who have always been in movements right alongside their male colleagues advocating for change.
This is why exercise programming must always have variation in movement, pace, duration, intensity, and load.
"She's always been very interested in movement," Lady Vaizey said.
"I always think about things in movement," said the designer, who once studied dance and made the film with a male dancer from the English National Ballet School, alongside Ms. McMenamy.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com