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Discover Ludwig'pop pills' is not correct and is not usable in written English.
It is an informal expression which means to take medications, usually in the form of pills. To use the phrase correctly in written English, the phrase would need to be reworded. For example, you could say "He took a few pills" or "He swallowed some pills".
Exact(32)
We Americans really like to pop pills.
So we may take vacations, pop pills, go to the movies, drink, smoke or shop.
And patients who simply want to pop pills for whatever ails them also may balk.
The way the characters pop pills is like mindless snacking — they'll take anything.
She reckons that people will pop pills to avoid deaths caused by unhealthy behaviour.
So people will pop pills even when there is little or no proof they work.
Similar(28)
Thousands of women swear by the latest incarnation of the phenomenon: having your placenta encapsulated into easy-to-pop pills that are said to provide an energy boost, restore iron levels, and help breast-milk production.
The young popped pills together.
He pops pills and gets drunk.
From drinking, I started popping pills.
I much rather use natural depression treatments than popping pills.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com