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'dive deeply into' is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to refer to exploring an issue or subject in great detail or with great intensity. For example, "I plan to dive deeply into the history of this region in order to better understand the culture."
Exact(24)
The worst offenders these days tend to be those writers who dive deeply into rustic foreign cuisines.
Meanwhile, if you want to adjust the shutter speed or aperture, you have to dive deeply into the labyrinth of on-screen menus.
You dive deeply into policy, plowing through a 300-page briefing book on the Department of Homeland Security on a Friday night.
He offered this advice: "Whichever candidate doesn't make it to the next step should take a deep breath and dive deeply into their Senate business," he said.
Mr. Wigan was the first executive to dive deeply into this business -- almost every other studio has since followed -- and his strategy paid off for Sony in hits like Mr. Lee's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," which cost about $17 million to make and made $213.5 million at the global box office in 2000.
Colleagues say hes got a unique ability to see the big picture and dive deeply into details.
Similar(35)
Back in February, I dived deeply into the workings of AutoSlash, a little company making big waves in the world of car rentals.
Had she dived deeply into just one city in this atlas of misery, Mohamed might have told us more about what it is like to be a scavenger child in Africa than this novel does.
— Jeff Gordinier The Times-Picayune: Randy Fertel, the son of the founder of the Ruth's Chris Steak House chain, has penned a memoir that dives deeply into his family's oddball saga.
In "Seductions of Rice," they managed to explore all of Asia (with a few detours to the Mediterranean) by diving deeply into every place and every way that rice is grown, polished, processed and eaten.
Most important, the singers — Quentin Earl Darrington (who played Coalhouse Walker Jr. in the 2009 revival of "Ragtime, Allan Harrisis (a wonderful rough-edged crooner of the Nat King Cole school), Karen Ziemba and Christiane Noll — dived deeply into the material.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com