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The phrase "land in hot water" is correct and usable in written English
This phrase is often used to mean that someone has gotten into trouble or found themselves in a difficult situation due to their own actions. For example, "The politician landed in hot water after making controversial statements during his speech."
Exact(5)
And to show how diverse we are in New York, judges land in hot water, too.
Yet clueless speakers casually toss them out all the time, and now and then they land in hot water.
Still, it is surely better to have a bank bring you a hot biscuit than to have a bank land in hot water.
Where it took Facebook some 6 months to land in hot water hell with Beacon, Twitter experiences furious storms of battle testing on an hourly basis.
You could land in hot water.
Similar(55)
Google names its phone the Nexus One, lands in hot water with Philip K. Dick's estate.
Mo Mowlam, the government's most popular minister, has landed herself - or has been landed - in hot water again.
Either they plotted a wave of federal crimes together or they landed in hot water for amateurish pranks.
I noted that Jared and Ivanka had also now landed in hot water for using private accounts for official business.
LG has also landed in hot water for its smart-television tracking and has stopped collecting data by default.
Mr. Paladino, a businessman from Buffalo, has previously landed in hot water for calling gay-pride parades "disgusting" and for forwarding racist emails to his friends.
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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