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"ever falling" is a correct phrase in written English.
It is often used to describe something that is constantly or continuously falling. Example: The waterfall, with its ever falling cascade, was a beautiful sight to behold.
Exact(40)
Somehow, Blick walked numerous tightropes, without ever falling off.
They caused the slowest recovery ever, falling real wages and prices.
What he wants is Brian Eno's desperately sad By This River: "You and I/ Underneath the sky that's ever falling down, down, down/ Ever falling down".
I can't see the city ever falling victim to gentrification in the same way London has.
No reliable observer here could remember Federer ever falling to earth like that.
Then, as our eyes climb, we find ourselves descending, to an undulating plain, and down from there again, ever falling, to a river.
Similar(18)
Anyone ever fall into the pipe?
No one's ever fallen off".
"First time I ever fell," he said.
Did Walter ever fall in love?
"Who thought those towers would ever fall?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com