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Discover LudwigThe phrase "grow on it" is not correct in standard English; the correct expression is "grow on me." You can use it when you want to express that something is becoming more appealing or likable over time
Example: "At first, I didn't like the new song, but it's starting to grow on me."
Alternatives: "I'm warming up to it" or "It's starting to appeal to me."
Exact(28)
Thus, eight of the populations have retained the ancestral phenotype of marginal - if any - stimulation by citrate (H0 above) and one has famously become Cit+ and can readily grow on it as a sole carbon and energy source (H2).
There is absolutely nothing that will not grow on it.
Termites can't eat it, nor can mold grow on it.
Plants and algae have little chance to grow on it, and the water is colder than most algae species can bear.
It's not complicated: city-dwellers rent a patch of land from a farmer, tell him what they want him to grow on it, and get their own fresh vegetables delivered to them weekly.
Tis not poverty I hate the most nor the eternal grovelling but the insults which grow on it which not even leeches can cure I will lay a quid that you have already been told the story of how your grandma won her case in court against Bill Frost and then led wild gallops up and down the main street of Benalla.
Similar(32)
Bark on diseased wood will have various colored fungi growing on it, or dark, sunken lesions.
Weber has sod, with all the grass growing on it like velvet.
Of Cabo Pulmo Steinbeck wrote: "Clinging to the coral, growing on it, burrowing into it, was a teeming fauna.
The trees growing on it are harvested and the land is either abandoned or converted to a plantation.
"I was worried I might open up the case and see mold growing on it or something," Mr. Kober said.
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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