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The phrase 'drown to' is not a correct phrase in written English
To make the proper phrase, you would need to use 'drown in,' meaning to be submerged or overwhelmed in something. For example: She drowned in debt after her business failed.
Exact(10)
To drown, to not be found?
The EU's de facto policy is to let migrants drown to stop others coming.
Human smugglers are reportedly throwing pregnant woman and children into the sea and leaving them to drown to force merchant vessels to take migrants ashore.
In the ideologically-driven Republican Party of today, many congressmen won't let the family dog drown to save their wives and children.
"I was getting worried that we were going to watch this girl drown to death, because no matter how hard we were hitting it, [the glass] wasn't cracking or spidering for a while," said Lazard.
Wagner's libretto is soaked in water from start to finish; Act I begins with a sailor hailing the ocean, and Act III ends with Isolde preparing "to drown, to sink — unconscious — highest bliss!" Viola, likewise, dwells at length on the sensation of immersion.
Similar(49)
From January 2003 to April 2013, 74 patients were admitted for seawater drowning to the two ICU.
They are, essentially, drowning to death.
Guess he fell into the toilet bowl and drowned to death?
But first the group had to avoid drowning to get across.
Age and sex were matched per one child drowning to at least two living children.
More suggestions(1)
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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