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Discover Ludwig"get going" before is an expression that is commonly used in written English to mean that someone should hurry and start doing something before it is too late.
For example: "We'd better get going before it gets dark outside."
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Although Qimonda has since then talked up its next-generation chip technology, known as Buried Wordline, it is still in the development stages and is unlikely to get going before late in the year.
"Let's get going before they change their minds," he said, only half in jest.
West Ham could not get going before the interval, with Anderson particularly poor, flunking corners and struggling defensively.
I get an early start, because things get going before breakfast and shut down soon after lunch.
"All right, get going before it starts raining," the president told reporters, ending the news conference after 16 minutes.
They didn't really want him to direct Hampton's script but bigger names were tied up and they needed to get going before Milos Forman's rival film, Valmont, appeared.
Similar(48)
Guadeloupe is a full-fledged department of France, so dinner never really gets going before 8.
For example, one patient exclaimed 'I get go' before running, in order to avoid ' harmful vapors on the unit'.
Nothing gets going before midnight, when the pub crawlers and night lizards come out to play.
In addition Matt Whitehouse, who was strong down the stretch in 2011, never got going before injuries shut him down with an 0-2 record in three appearances.
Before it gets going, here's a reading list.
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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