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The phrase "divest in" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It means to get rid of or sell off one's investment or assets. Example: The shareholders decided to divest in the struggling company after several consecutive years of losses.
Exact(18)
Obama has given tacit support to the fossil fuel divestment cause, urging students to "invest, divest" in a 2013 speech at Georgetown University.
"You don't need to divest in fossil fuels, you need to decarbonise them".
The move is part of an overall drive to divest in territories where HBSC is not a strategic player.
Yet it was the Quakers in Britain who became the first to divest in October that year.
"Many church bodies are beginning to divest in coal and tar sands and I would urge you to do the same".
Of particular importance to the growth of SRI was Mandela's antiapartheid movement and the Anglican Communion and other churches' call for corporations to divest in South Africa.
Similar(41)
(Swarthmore divested in 1990, decades after students began calling for divestment in 1965).
Maybe there are some branches to get divested in less attractive areas?
He has another, quite different message for the mindless herd now divesting in despair.
In November, a Corporate Knights analysis suggested it would have been £238m better off had it divested in 2012.
As a result of this analysis, ANU declared that it was divesting in a few carbon exposed companies.
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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