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Discover Ludwig"making rounds" is a correct expression in written English
It means to go around doing something, such as visiting places or talking to people. For example, "The teacher went around the classroom, making rounds to each student."
Exact(59)
You would start making rounds".
Khan was making rounds, with one nurse, both of them wearing P.P.E.
He toured Italy regularly, making rounds of the churches to see the pictures.
There's a flurry of tweets and a petition currently making rounds on the internet asking Vodafone to pay its taxes.
LETTER FROM BERLIN devotes a couple of paragraphs to observations of life in East Berlin: making rounds of night spots, mentions jazz outfits.
He recalled making rounds at the institute with two eminent neurologists and stopping at the bedside of a woman who had had a brain hemorrhage.
With that two-year exclusion set to expire in 2014, Amgen's lobbyists began making rounds again on Capitol Hill last fall.
His walking stick has run into alligators only twice, and both instances were while making rounds in the field and not on a guided walk.
As the story goes, Nascher was making rounds one day when the attending physician, discussing an elderly woman who was very ill, diagnosed her ailment as "old age".
The federal inspection service has about 300 meat inspectors in New York and New Jersey, each making rounds at several meat processing and packing plants daily.
At about 11 24 A.M., while making rounds, Officer Mead looked inside Lonnie's cell and saw him hanging from the ceiling.
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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