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Discover LudwigSentence The phrase 'dread about' is not a correct sentence structure in written English.
Instead, you can use the phrases 'dread about something/something' or 'dread something/something'. For example, "I dread about my upcoming final exams" or "I dread the upcoming final exams".
Exact(52)
Frazier speaks with dread about a town called White Clay, Neb.
Nor can it entirely be put down to my ongoing dread about Britain leaving the EU.
"A dread, a time-watching dread, about getting to the theatre on time.
Howe, a vehement critic of the contrived crosstown rivalries spawned by interleague play, expressed particular dread about the series.
Others have a sense of dread about Mr. Putin's assertion that Russia needs a "dictatorship of law".
There is much to dread about late August: the heat, the humidity, those people who leave work at like 1 every Friday while you work normal hours.
Similar(8)
Disintegration dreaded About face Cleaning up Thailand Estrada's final scene?
Barry Loser star of Jim Smith's I Am Not a Loser series similarly learns to cope as he runs the gauntlet of the kind of mockery everyone dreads about school.
Finally, there are the dreaded what-about-me phone calls.
Writing about the experience for The Drum, she described the feeling of dread brought about by continued sexualized comments from her employer.
"Dreams" got off to an unfortunate pure-dance start, suggesting that this was to be an evening of dread proselytizing about assimilation.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com