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The phrase "engaging in something" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe an action or activity that a person is actively participating in or involved with. Example: "The group spent the afternoon engaging in team-building exercises, strengthening their communication and problem-solving skills."
Exact(29)
China has not been engaging in "trade" with us, they have been engaging in something else entirely...
Pyongyang appears to be engaging in something of a diplomatic offensive.
The couple on a beach in Robert Frank's "Fourth of July 195858) seem to be engaging in something quite licit.
By agreeing to return to final-status negotiations the two sides are engaging in something last attempted seven years ago, before the second intifada.
He did so, though, with tremendous guilt over engaging in something so seemingly frivolous while others were facing life-and-death challenges back home.
At the same time, not all who stay in Russia are wholeheartedly here, many of them engaging in something that has been labeled internal emigration.
Similar(31)
And they do engage in something that looks like warfare.
As a novelist, you are engaged in something analogous.
Their policy is to keep the Americans engaged in something the Europeans can live with.
Other men — me, for example — might be driven to engage in something even worse: sexless fidelity.
Qatar is engaged in something of a museum arms race with the nearby emirate of Abu Dhabi.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com