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The word “lashed” is a correct and usable word in written English.
You can use it to describe the act of striking something with a whip or stick, or to describe when the wind is blowing against a surface with great force. For example: "The ship was lashed by the high winds as it sailed through the stormy sea."
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Richard Nixon lashed out at reporters during his "last press conference" in 1962, famously proclaiming "you don't have Nixon to kick around any more".
Isolated on the platform, Farage lashed out at the BBC saying it had selected a leftwing audience for the debate.
Kasparov lashed out today at a journalist from a Russian broadcaster, which he accused of not reporting the moment he was arrested and jailed in 2007 for leading an anti-Putin demonstration in Moscow.
Robben had earlier been guilty of a blatant dive, with Santi Cazorla in attendance, and Wenger lashed out at the Holland winger.
There was much talk of the 15 Wainwrights of that week; only 199 to go before I'm 70! Stephen Bibby What could compensate for being lashed by incessant Scottish precipitation for an entire day, huddled in the cockpit of a sailboat dressed like an Atlantic trawlerman on an almost windless day?
I've never really been violent when drunk before so I don't why I lashed out that night.
The midfielder coolly clipped it out to the excellent Redmond, who lashed a low shot into the net from 15 yards.
They are lashed to the mast of George Osborne's economic judgment.
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"In high winds they can be dangerous, and cause damage to homes and property," Mr Romney urges.Sensible advice, no doubt, but something in me likes the idea of a multi-billion dollar election juggernaut being halted by visions of a voter impaled then pinned to a wind-lashed lawn by a flying Romney-for-president yard sign.(Photo credit: AFP).
Windy, storm-lashed Britain is a good place to harness the weather; boosters talk excitedly of a splurge on renewable electricity and the possibility of capturing the market for offshore wind turbines or wave-power machines, creating tens of thousands of jobs.
In a sleet-lashed Trafalgar Square, one sign read: "1968 revisited?
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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