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Discover LudwigThe phrase "be sweet on" is correct and is commonly used in written English.
It generally means to have a fondness or an affection for someone. Example: She has been sweet on him since they first met.
Exact(6)
Up over 58% year-to-date and over 90% for the five-year period, making this one lemon plenty of people continue to be sweet on.
Her aim was to create something that would be "sweet on the eyes", albeit a bit tough going down.
He also happens to be sweet on Marcus's younger sister, Syd (Gabrielle Union), an undercover federal agent who is mixed up in their case, and whose abduction by the chief bad guy occasions the unauthorized invasion of Cuba at the end of the movie.
User "OPTRICE" has submitted a recipe for a summer drink that you might be sweet on: milk, syrup and ice.
This massive display probably will not be available for your purchase but my goodness, wouldn't GOW2 be sweet on it.
Apparently it's a 1.6x cropped FOV, which some people will like and some not; at any rate those new wide angle zooms would be sweet on a 1.6x or 1.3.
Similar(54)
Clare, the one on the left, had always been sweet on me, but I had a thing for her sister, Kim, the one on the right.
Jack had always been sweet on History.
Wall Street and the business press were sweet on Erbitux as well.
America was sweet on Russian dressing — until Thousand Island came along.
"It was sweet on the outside and completely hollow on the inside.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com