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Free sign up"get on the scale" is a perfectly fine sentence in written English
You can use it when referring to someone stepping on a physical scale to measure their weight. For example, "Before beginning his diet, the man had to get on the scale to see how much he weighed."
Exact(21)
I get on the scale every day of my life.
The moment you get on the scale, the scale becomes your destination.
"I don't really get on the scale, that's not my thing," said Hampton, who is listed at 325 pounds.
"I don't weigh myself, but it's just like women who get on the scale," said Ms. Furman, 51. "This test is like that for me.
O.K., every hour or so (or about as often as I used to get on the scale when I was in high school).
Otherwise, it's like saying, 'I want to get fit but I don't want to get on the scale.' " And the scale itself, which the building council has constantly calibrated, can still require expert advice.
Similar(38)
Get on the scales.
Nobody really knew – she was too heavy to get on the scales.
When I come into the weighing room after a win and get on the scales and then put another set of colours on, it's gone.
But even if you just get on the scales out of curiosity, studies confirm what you probably already know, that weight fluctuates during the week, increasing over the weekend as people eat bigger meals and move less.
Do you have any other solutions?' He said, 'Well, not really, but would you like to see the dietician?' "About seven and a half months later, I finally get the meeting with the dietician and I get on the scales and she was talking about surgery.
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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