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The phrase "raises a brow" is correct and usable in written English
It is typically used to indicate surprise, skepticism, or curiosity about something. Example: "When she heard the unexpected news, she raised a brow in disbelief."
Exact(1)
As they leave, one of the men's mobile phones chirrups and Bolt raises a brow to accentuate his point.
Similar(58)
The equities markets, meanwhile, barely raised a brow.
He looked over her head at Joe, raising a brow, trading a nod and a wink.
And while Clinton totted up her own list of Scandinavian-style domestic goals, such as paid parental leave, she raised a brow at Sanders when he talked of "revolution" and the systemic rot of late capitalism.
"But when he took it all off... " One likes to think that Mitchum, who died in 1997, would, rather than rolling over in his grave, just raise a brow and narrow those bedroom eyes, suggesting that hey, he might try anything once.
McCain's would also raise a brow, "Our chief executive has promised not to raise additional capital.
"I raise a brow at your work, Cleo, the line overtly gestural, guttural.
"I raise a brow at your work, Cleo, the line overtly gestural and guttural.
In Jonathan Van Meter's extensive cover story on Lady Gaga for Vogue's October issue, one line might make you raise a brow.
Skeptics might raise a brow at Ratajkowski's unique brand of string-bikini feminism, but the launches of her swimsuit and lingerie lines fall on the heels of ongoing crisis at Victoria's Secret and the rise of brands that also preach empowerment, such as Rihanna's Savage x Fenty.
Raise a brow.
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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