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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'boom through' is not considered grammatically correct in written English.
The phrase might be used in casual speech to mean 'move quickly,' however, it is not appropriate for written English. For example: Incorrect: He boomed through the door. Correct: He rushed through the door.
Exact(21)
Last week, Mr. Obama met with President Hu Jintao of China, a country that for years fueled America's consumption boom through inexpensive exports and purchases of American debt.
It has also done well out of the housing boom through rising stamp duties incurred on home purchases.
For the simulation, we designed a multibody system that consists of a floating crane barge, an elastic boom, and a cargo connected to the boom through wire ropes.
To summarize, then, the true Romney plan is to create an economic boom through the sheer power of Mr. Romney's personal awesomeness.
For a while there was boom, through the middle decades of the 20th century when the motor industry, in Ford and Volkswagen, drove development.
At each site, she worked with communities in the process of understanding and devising strategies to survive during the soy boom through their engagement with municipal and provincial regulation.
Similar(39)
His voice boomed through the envelope.
Today's China, booming through its stage of savage capitalism.
This is Poundland, and it is booming through the recession.
Such "outsourcing" has boomed through America's IT recession, and beyond.
But as Bangkok boomed through the 1970s and 80s, much of the countryside was left behind.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com