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Discover Ludwig"heavy footsteps" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use "heavy footsteps" to describe when someone is walking heavily, with each footstep creating a noticeable, and possibly loud sound. For example: "The detective's heavy footsteps were heard echoing down the hallway."
Exact(22)
In the final moments, heavy footsteps are audible offstage.
(We hear the heavy footsteps of Hitler's guard approaching in the hallway).
The first sounds we hear in Juliana F. May's "Commentary = not thing" are heavy footsteps.
Then, heavy footsteps and a deep voice in the corridor outside; somehow we suppressed our squeals.
At one point I nearly fainted as heavy footsteps approached — I was sure her parents had come home early.
He walked into the American residence, "his heavy footsteps shaking the rafters," Beschloss wrote in his book.
Similar(38)
Someone with a heavy footstep lived above her.
"Gunn," he said, in time to his heavy echoing footsteps, "Gunn.
Thus as my son trots off to the bus stop, footsteps heavy and cumbersome but certainly resplendent, I silently chuckle to myself, remembering my white leather "go-go" boots and suede miniskirt of more than a few years ago.
I'd construct the pop of tires on gravel, the heavy door slam, footsteps up the porch, the first door whine, the second door jingle, and see my father enter, call for my mother and sing: "I want you back!
He wrote radio plays, including one without words, Revenge (1978), in which an escaped prisoner communicates with the audience only by his heavy breathing, running footsteps and other special effects.
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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