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Discover Ludwig"boosted onto" is a correct phrase and can be used in written English.
It means to assist or propel someone or something onto a higher surface or level. Example: The firefighter boosted the child onto his shoulders to help him escape from the burning building.
Exact(2)
Well-known, she was boosted onto the stage by an eager crowd.
It soon turned out however, that they lacked what it takes to dismember a bison, and the animal had to be pushed laboriously back up the chute, boosted onto a truck and taken away to be cut up.
Similar(57)
By the time he boosted himself onto the table he was sweating.
With what seemed the last of his strength, he boosted himself onto a flat area of wood to keep from becoming ensnared in the amassing wreckage.
Tonight, though, Pill boosted herself onto the dog's back and stood at her full height, eye to eye with Wes.
Their popularity also boosted them onto the Billboard Social 50, entering at #24.
"Here, Mom, I'll take him," she would say, boosting Paro onto her own lap when her mother's food tray arrived.
What Marshall has needed is a national celebrity football hero to boost it onto the happy news network and to get it into a better conference with more clout and screen time.
I went much slower, searching for handgrips, allowing the swell to tug at me and using the flume to boost me onto the outcrop.
But I will boost him onto my shoulders and let him see the world and what it has to offer, and he will decide which direction to go.
Furthermore, those investigators showed that a single sustained inflation to 30 cmH2O boosted the ventilatory cycle onto the deflation limb of the pressure volume curve (Fig. 1).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com