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The phrase "burst it" is not commonly used in standard written English and may not be considered correct in most contexts
It could be used informally to suggest breaking or popping something, but it lacks clarity without additional context. Example: "I was so frustrated with the balloon that I just wanted to burst it."
Exact(60)
When the bubble burst, it left in its wake woefully expensive economies that had lost their competitiveness.
A decade ago, Japan was a byword for failed economic policies: years after its real estate bubble burst, it was still suffering from chronic deflation and slow growth.
Currently, Google is thought to make annual profits of about $150m.To be worth the rumoured $15 billion for longer than it takes a bubble to burst, it will need to raise its profitability substantially.
After the bubble burst, it fell below $1 in 2002.
"When the bubble burst, it burst completely," said P. J. Carlesimo, the Nets' coach.
(Perhaps, after the bubble burst, it did this in a bid to retain those clients' assets).
Before South Africa's recent burst, it had happened only twice in the previous 1,250 tests.
Fortunately, he did not make the mistake of trying to burst it.
"And that nightmare was that when the dam burst it would burst catastrophically".
If his jugular had burst, it could not have seemed more terrible.
That is the real bubble, and let us hope that Brexit has burst it forever.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com