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Free sign upThe phrase "fetch in" is not commonly used in standard written English and may be considered incorrect or awkward
It could be used in informal contexts to mean retrieving or bringing something inside.
Example: "Can you fetch in the groceries from the car?"
Alternatives: "bring in" or "retrieve."
Exact(59)
It is unclear how much the business may fetch in a potential sale.
That Deutsch painting he bought for $3,940 in 1993 could easily fetch in the six figures on the market today, Mr. Piening said.
But experts say the prices demanded by Khalil are a fraction of what those objects can fetch in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Europe and the United States.
Her canvases now fetch in excess of $1m.
The jewellery had been expected to fetch in the region of £3 million.
WhipCar provides suggestions for the prices different cars might fetch in various neighbourhoods.
Models are supposed to show the price an asset would fetch in a sale.
If he were to get traded, he pondered aloud, what would he fetch in return?
Surely there's no harm in wondering how much a used DBS will fetch in 10 years.
Is it at all conceivable to have [? bunks ?] that fetch in new code or an allocator that shuffles somehow?
Similar(1)
Oil's fuel monopoly is the leverage that enables a barrel of crude to fetch - in tight markets - the $75-$75-$125 industry profitability requires.
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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