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Discover LudwigThe phrase "errand to run" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a task or chore that needs to be completed, often involving going to a specific location or completing a specific action. Example: "I have a few errands to run this morning, including picking up some groceries and dropping off a package at the post office."
Exact(11)
She leaves her son, Richie, with a neighbor, saying that she has a last-minute errand to run for her husband's birthday, and drives without direction.
Before she could take me to see some sights, she had an errand to run: she had to return a tape to the video store.
It is full of images of rebirth, the most astonishing of which is the final image of the much older Leo literally revisiting his past and coming away again with yet one more romantic errand to run.
The three novels are structural siblings, in that each covers a day or two in the company of an ordinary man with things to do - a professional errand to run, a girlfriend to meet, a road trip to embark on.
Stephany Espenshade ("I called in to work and said I have an errand to run") bought what she described as "the greatest jacket ever," a patchwork quilt of a coat that she recognized from an episode a couple of seasons ago.
Shopping becomes not an errand to run, but an experience to be enjoyed.
Similar(49)
He has errands to run, the murderer.
There will be errands to run.
ODDS AND ENDS Usually I'll have leftover errands to run.
We, too, have errands to run, dreams to catch, loves to win and lose.
There were always errands to run, I guess, and walls to jump.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com