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Discover Ludwig"kicking on" is a grammatically correct phrase and is commonly used in written English
It means to continue or progress, often with determination and energy. Example: The team faced many challenges, but they kept kicking on and eventually won the championship.
Exact(60)
He hopes to resume kicking on Wednesday.
I'll keep going and kicking on and see if I can pick up more caps.
But for most French cyclists the big struggle is kicking on after the initial breakthrough.
"To win against India was massive, and I'm looking forward to kicking on".
"But we spoke in the dressing room about really kicking on now because we have had excuses.
"He went from kicking on a pretty good surface to a surface that was rough," Edwards said".
"It was a difficult pitch, a fast pitch and at times it was probably better to play the ball into feet rather than the space because it was kicking on a lot," Rooney said.
Night sounds are heard: wind, barking dogs, a faraway train whistle, a water heater kicking on, a violent spate of rain, an insect bumping against the microphone, desultory vocalizations of the cat.
I can start kicking on with my career again".
"I'm getting to 30-40 in that aggressive way and not kicking on," he added.
However, instead of kicking on, United shrank somewhat and Everton grew as a force in the game.
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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