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The phrase "brood on" is correct and usable in written English.
It means to think deeply about something, usually in a negative or worried way. For example, "I could see her in the corner, brooding on the mistakes she had made."
Exact(59)
Yet it is prose poems like this that make one brood on life's formlessness – its interrupted narratives, unsmooth paths, crazy paving.
"As I hover over my boiling caldrons like one of Macbeth's weird sisters, I brood on the possibility of botulism, the 'big B,' "she writes.
And then Nachman would brood on what had happened.
And who doesn't brood on that from time to time?
Dreamy-eyed, the old conductors brood on the April of Gulden's mustard.
Daylight began to brood on the deck, creeping up into the windows.
And, every now and again, Americans brood on whether they really want to pay it.
Portraits of grizzled Melville-era sea captains brood on the walls.
Phil Harrison 9pm, BBC1 Plenty this week for Ross to brood on, hirsutely, while fair Demelza sleeps.
"On KRM, well he's not bollocking you, [you] must not brood on lack of calls," she wrote.
Similar(1)
He can be all brooding on stage.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com