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Discover LudwigThe phrase "moving mountains" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is a common idiom that means to accomplish something that is incredibly challenging or seemingly impossible. Example: Despite facing numerous obstacles, the team was determined to achieve their goal and ended up moving mountains to make it happen.
Idiom
Move mountains.
If you would move mountains to do something, you would make any effort to achieve your aim.
Dictionary
moving mountains
verb
Present participle of move mountains
Exact(27)
"Moving Mountains" is a ballad that draws on synth beats to relate a love struggle to an impossible task, such as moving mountains.
"The pleasure is in moving mountains!" Judge Lippman says grandly.
Even moving mountains, I believed it could really happen," he said.
"Since it was about moving mountains because you love someone, it was very easy to understand".
There's a shortage of HGV drivers in an economy that relies on moving mountains of heavy goods.
Mining on this scale is nothing to do with shafts, lifts and tunnels; it is about moving mountains, endlessly, to the sea.
Similar(33)
There, right beside me, is a moving mountain dappled with snowflakes.
(Moving mountain lions into the park is a last-ditch option, Riley says).
Volcanoes can literally move mountains.
Our faith had moved mountains.
David Ortiz moved mountains: two beans.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com