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The phrase "he just set" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to someone who has recently placed or established something, often in a casual context. Example: "After a long day, he just set the table for dinner."
Exact(15)
"He just set Louisiana back about 50 years," Porter said.
He just set his jaw, smiled a wide open smile and moved along.
He just set out to build houses like the one his grandmother brought him up in.
He just set up four inches off either corner, stuck out his glove and waited for the ball.
He just set the bar way too high.' Maybe it's my turn now.
Did he just set down words that he thought would sound good coming from her mouth?
Similar(44)
He just sets a wonderful example of how someone should handle their business".
He's not a housewrecker; he just sets his music in order and knows what to do.
He just sets his traders loose, and they apply their ideas to fancy computer models that identify opportunities in areas like interest rates, derivatives and foreign currencies.
When a waiter approached Louise Burns at Claridge's on Monday and told her hotel policy required her to cover her breastfeeding baby with a napkin, he cannot have predicted the events that he had just set in train.
"China's not waiting to revamp its economy," he said, knocking down a rhetorical straw man he had just set up about how "Washington has been telling us to wait for decades, even as the problems have grown worse".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com