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Discover LudwigThe phrase "always soaring" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is consistently rising or achieving great heights, whether literally or metaphorically.
Example: "Her ambitions are always soaring, pushing her to achieve more than she ever thought possible."
Alternatives: "constantly rising" or "perpetually ascending".
Exact(2)
Nuclear power costs are, as always, soaring, while renewable costs are falling fast.
This abrupt switch from the sociological to the technological is typical of Godard's conversation: his sentences, like his films, are always soaring into abstractions, or breaking off, pivoting on an instant of silence to change direction.
Similar(58)
Taka's cooking does not always soar, but it is seldom boring.
But despite what the recent euphoric market move may make you think, stocks don't always soar after rate cuts.
Red Birds doesn't always soar, but it's an effective satire that reminds us that everybody – refugees, distraught mothers, unthinking airmen, well-meaning aid workers, dogs and ghosts – has a need to love, and be loved.
His work always soared when he incorporated elements of the surreal, as exemplified in the work of one of his heroes, Spike Milligan, or indeed his own juggling and acrobatic act, the Forty-Four Flying Fletchers, in his student days.
A couple in the midst of a public ordeal is not excused from life's usual bothers, and what is striking when you find yourself in proximity to a crisis isn't always the soaring arc of the fall but the way it touches against, grazes and refracts all the familiar daily torments on the way down.
As we head closer to that time of year when gas prices always "mysteriously soar," car thieves will have a more and more difficult time unloading gas-guzzlers.
Anti-Americanism, always high, is soaring.Had Pakistan wished, Mr Davis might have been quietly whisked away.
Isn't Mr. Hough at risk of being thought to do too much, across too wide a spectrum, and not always at the soaring level of his pianism?
(No. 6 was Richard Nixon's "Checkers" speech of 1952, demonstrating that successful speeches aren't always ones with soaring ideas or rhetoric).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com