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The phrase "at it ever" is not correct and does not make sense in standard written English.
It seems to be an incomplete or incorrect expression, and without additional context, it is unclear when it could be used.
Example: "I don't know if he is still at it ever since the incident."
Alternatives: "still at it" or "at it again".
Exact(20)
They have been at it ever since they captured the White House.
She's been at it ever since and now clears about $40 a week.
They have been at it ever since; they are at it now.
He's been at it ever since, even teaching a course on magic at Queensborough Community College.
Al Jaffee started out as a professional cartoonist in the early 1940s, and he has been at it ever since.
He started it in 1892 when an uncle suggested it, and has been at it ever since.
Similar(40)
Having all the illustrations replaced with gothic graffiti style paintings means that I can now look at it without ever having to feel ungoth, even for a moment.
Between the two restaurants, the TV show, the spice line, running LudoBird at Staples Center, is it ever too much?
"At no point did it ever feel it was a marketing campaign".
At no point does it ever arc up into this triumph.
"But at no time was it ever O.K. in the slightest way to file for fictitious incorrect falsification.
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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