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Discover LudwigThe phrase "always wrestling" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a continuous struggle or conflict, whether literal or metaphorical.
Example: "He is always wrestling with his thoughts, trying to find clarity in his decisions."
Alternatives: "constantly grappling" or "perpetually struggling".
Exact(2)
Arthur added, "Oh, we still get into it, always wrestling and fighting over something".
Mr. Kushner said of his friend: "He's always wrestling with questions of how to present the world to children as it is without violating the prescriptions that need to be left inviolate.
Similar(55)
"Only we always wrestle first".
Art has always wrestled with emerging ideas.
He has always wrestled with the peculiar predicament of Africa's white tribe.
Of course, high-school wrestlers always wrestled in their weight class, so I'd never seen anything quite like this.
And yet, Carole, I've always wrestled with this mystery: I could never let go of you".
Anyone in a top newsroom management job during tough times always wrestles with a crucial question: Where is the line?
Real estate experts say that co-op boards large and small always wrestle with pet policies, many of them tied to barking dogs.
Politicians and charitable boards will always wrestle with its impossible dilemmas – how to treat the needy with civilised generosity without weakening work incentives.
Looking back from a new working life in Australia, he told the Observer he had always "wrestled with the meaning of the term 'black theatre'".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com