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Discover Ludwig"pacing through" is an acceptable phrase in written English.
It can be used when speaking of someone walking or moving in a steady, purposeful way. For example, "He was pacing through the hall, searching for the office he needed to find."
Exact(16)
She was pacing through her movements with Phebe Berkowitz, the stage director.
Ann imagined him pacing through this new house, filling Dick in on all that was strange: home, school, weather.
Two rather frowsy old gentlemen, pacing through a warehouse district last Tuesday, passed a modest lunch cart.
The New Yorker, May 5 , 1945P. 15 Two rather frowsy old gentlemen, pacing through a warehouse district last Tuesday, passed a modest lunch cart.
From the moment the show opens, with its title character (Mr. O'Hare) pacing, pacing, pacing through Santo Loquasto's two-tiered set, this "Uncle Vanya" is a perpetual-motion machine.
But in addition to these figures, Beaumont points out, London's streets belong to the nightwalker, a "modern antihero" who spends the hours of darkness pacing through the city, whether this is because he is seeking himself (almost all the figures Beaumont discusses are male) or fleeing from himself.
Similar(44)
For eight hours, I paced through the night in that Manhattan apartment.
All day long, she paces through the newly whitewashed shrine, sweeping, dusting, adjusting the flames of small oil lamps.
Finally, we compared the time spent per each proverb, as participants self-paced through the list of proverbs in each condition.
I pace through the doorway and feel eyes upon me.
I pace through the doorway and feel eyes upon me.
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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