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Discover LudwigThe phrase "are fetching more" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the act of obtaining or retrieving additional items, data, or information.
Example: "The new marketing strategies are fetching more customers than we anticipated."
Alternatives: "are attracting more" or "are drawing in more".
Exact(3)
Professionals are moving into the area, and homes that sold for a song are fetching more than $200,000.
Thirty-year-old houses on flat, one-acre lots are fetching more than $900,000 and large new homes often sell for over $2 million.
The finest specimens of tourmaline, rhodochrosite and crystallized gold are fetching more than $1 million apiece about five times what they sold for five years ago, Heritage says.
Similar(57)
[C6.] Domain Names Are Big Again Dot-com domain names are fetching respectable prices again, after more than three years of attracting scant interest.
Dot-com domain names are fetching respectable prices again, after more than three years of attracting scant interest.
According to Steinberg, condos in Greenwich Village are still fetching more than $1,500 a square foot, and land for new construction is extraordinarily scarce.
Reservations for some of the park's 900 campsites have lately been fetching $100 or more per night, many times the $20 the national park service charges on its Web site, recreation.gov.
The legendary Italian white truffles (tuber magnatum pico) are always gone by January; in any case, the 2003 crop was so small that the few truffles available were fetching record prices, more than $3,000 a pound.
This season, Bonds helped pack AT&T Park for much of late July and early August, when he was closing in on the record and game tickets were fetching $500 or more on the Internet.
Siblings, friends, or housemates might be amenable to being bribed into fetching more food and drinks for you if you're lucky.
Even this, though, is unclear about that "devastation," and although "mist of perfume and face powder" is fetching, it may be more suited to verse than to prose.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com