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Discover LudwigThe phrase "play chase" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It is typically used to describe the act of engaging in the game of chasing or being chased by someone. Example: The children decided to play chase in the park, with the youngest child eagerly running after the older ones.
Exact(12)
Fabian meets the neighbors — some dogs who are "happy to play chase with their new friend" — and Hondo endures being dressed up by the baby.
Back in India, I would play "chase the rooster" [a rooster is let loose and you have to catch it], and that got you sharp.
One in five had been banned from playing conkers and one in six were not allowed to play chase because over-protective parents had ruled that it was too dangerous.
Despite the Phillies' potential emergence as a challenger to the Braves in the National League East, Mets General Manager Steve Phillips said, "You don't play chase in this game".
"I have thought long and hard about the opportunity of playing for England after I became eligible to play," Chase added.
Sinfield's touchfinder offered England field position, and from the resulting play Chase and Tomkins combined to free Hall on the left for an easy score, and his 150th career try.
Similar(48)
Lezzers are too much if we swagger around in outfits that make us look like a prisoner or prison officer, resplendent with bunches of keys clipped to our leather belts, or when we lash on the lipstick and play chase-the-tonsils with some girly outside a Soho bar.
"He spends a lot of his free play chasing the other children with a stick," Mrs. Willing said.
She addresses related questions – when is a theatrical update appropriate, and who decides? – in her play, "Chasing Heaven," which is running at the New York International Fringe Festival through Aug. 26.
You don't want to play chasing golf around here, firing at the pins.
Another is the monument to Pronya Prokopovna and Svirid Golohvastov, which was unveiled in 1989, depicting two characters, Pronya Prokopovna and Svirid Golohvastov, from the play Chasing Two Rabbits, which was written by Mykhailo Starytskyi.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com