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Discover LudwigThe phrase "he drips" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It may refer to a person who is continuously leaking liquid, dripping with sweat, or exuding a particular emotion or aura. Example: Despite the hot weather, John continued to work hard and as a result, he dripped with sweat.
Exact(8)
Gorky responded promptly, "If he drips, I drip".
He drips water on it from an eyedropper.
He drips saliva on to me and is so nasty and violent – I just think, no way".
And, y'know, I've told Nick Brown that if he drips pig blood on my election I'll have him put down.
Why, if speakability is Carson's aim, would she have one of her characters declare, "Look at him, look how he drips unhealth — shudder object!" Why would Helen be referred to — distractingly, jarringly — as a "weapon of mass destruction"?
He drips pink fluid on to a thin white disc.
Similar(52)
In writing it, he dripped righteous anger on everyone, the Tory elite and Labour.
"Twenty feet of visibility," said Sean A. Sheldrake, a unit diving officer from the federal Environmental Protection Agency as he dripped on the deck.
Pollock may have played jazz when he dripped and flicked paint on his canvases, but we wouldn't dream of playing jazz in the gallery.
He dripped turpentine into his paint as in "Blue Trees" (1945) and scratched in a cross-hatch pattern in "Rooster's Domain" (1948).
At a news conference in Jerusalem, he dripped scorn on the United States for its reluctance to launch a dubious preventive war against Iran – a war that even many authoritative and patriotic Israelis don't want.
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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