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The phrase "in a spree" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to describe a period of excessive or uncontrolled activity, often related to spending, drinking, or engaging in a particular behavior.
Example: "After winning the lottery, she went on a shopping spree, buying everything she had ever wanted."
Alternatives: "on a binge" or "in a frenzy".
Exact(36)
Authorities said Lanza fired dozens and dozens of times in a spree that lasted minutes.
The killings started in a spree, with six people shot in 30 hours, then became more methodical and slower-paced.
Suárez, one of six players that Liverpool has acquired since its American takeover 10 months ago — in a spree totaling $150 million —was fresher than Arsenal's defense.
His one chance from open play was miscontrolled and he eventually went off in a spree of second-half substitutions that did absolutely nothing to enliven the occasion.
ATLANTA — A jury on Friday found Brian G. Nichols guilty of murdering four people in 2005 in a spree of violence known here as the Courthouse Shootings.
In a spree mirroring the online gold rush that accompanied Hurricane Katrina, online speculators are scooping up hundreds of Hurricane Rita-related Web domain names, and Rita-themed Internet auctions have begun.
Similar(24)
There is a good sized pool for cooling off in after a spree in the souks.
There were fires in a national park, a flood in India, a spree of robberies across the river.
Michelle Obama spent the weekend in Los Angeles, attending a spree of fundraisers.
So it is no wonder that the women loot the supermarket in "a shopping spree to end all shopping sprees" that gives the play its title.
(Ages 4 to 8) A SPREE IN PAREE Written and illustrated by Catherine Stock.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
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