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Discover Ludwig"boiling up" is a correct and usable phrase in written English, and it can be used to describe a situation that is escalating quickly or becoming chaotic.
For example, you could say, "The debate in the office was quickly boiling up as tempers flared."
Dictionary
boiling up
verb
Present participle of boil up
Exact(60)
People are boiling up inside.
"We'll make a soup out of it while the water is boiling up".
I left the cinema depressed and with a certain amount of hatred boiling up inside.
The coalition is boiling up a row over tax cuts ahead of December's autumn statement.
"There was a lot of frustration that had been boiling up within me, so I went for broke.
"A new musical culture," it said, "filled with self-assertion and anger, has come boiling up from the streets.
I thought about boiling up some linguine and making myself a hearty lunch of pasta with pesto.
Sometimes, the boos would come first, boiling up from within the Yankee Stadium stands, eliciting an immediate rejoinder of cheers and applause.
These and others cross paths in overlapping melodramas that escalate into a series of tragedies boiling up in a city that is anything but quiet.
Then at that moment all those feelings that made you long ago decide never to see her again will come boiling up inside you.
The effect: the timely advertisement of arguments, with both the experts and the President pressured to consider the main choices as they came boiling up from below.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com