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Discover Ludwig"getting busy with" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to describe the process of beginning a task or activity. For example, "I'm getting busy with planning the company Christmas party."
Exact(17)
And instead of getting busy with their own purpose and business idea, they spend their time stressing over your and your business.
In the video, Voteman is getting busy with five vigorous sexual partners when he's interrupted by a call to action.
But April is also carrying on with the city's black mayor, a hound of a guy who seems to be getting busy with half the neighborhood of Buckhead.
"Things were getting busy with the civil rights movement, there was a land league that took up the cause of the small farmers against the multinationals, and of course there was the north".
The issue is, if you give savvy students a compulsory stricture that is so absurd it cries out to be subverted, they will start getting busy with the subversion.
If you took away the theological context of Santorum's screed, you would have a program for secular politics: Since we are here to serve man, then we should start getting busy with projects of political salvation, like universal health care, environmental protection, the alleviation of poverty, and so on.
Similar(43)
"Fast food and Chinese fast food is a concept that China needs as people are getting busier with their lifestyle," he says.
Getting busier with making your life better.
Lawyers got busy with the effort to reorganize.
That's when we get busy with calls.
He wheels it out of its little shed and gets busy with a spanner.
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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