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Discover Ludwig"rake it in" is correct and usable in written English.
It is an informal expression that means to make a lot of money. For example, "He was able to rake it in by working hard and taking extra shifts."
Dictionary
rake it in
verb
To make a lot of money.
Exact(33)
As a kidlit junkie, I hope this optimistic mood is justified and that the children's book market continues to rake it in, giving editors enough wiggle-room to experiment.
The only way to get rid of Big Money in the long run was to rake it in right now.
But as a private equity consortium ponders a £10bn bid for Sainsbury's, the supermarket chain, campaigners in Britain are wondering whether the tax regime needs reforming to make it harder for the industry and its luminaries to rake it in.
People think Realtors rake it in.
The hotels, airlines, restaurants, pubs and venues rake it in.
They also rake it in from ticket sales and club merchandise.
Similar(26)
It's no wonder: Americans, having rediscovered their sweet teeth, are on a new sugar binge and candy makers are raking it in again.
(See "China Unicom Rakes It In").
And there's the real reason: Senior executives are raking it in too fast to want anything to change.
A year after our cover story, Best Buy is raking it in, even though its marketing strategy was out of step with some consumers' desires.
The 90s LOL!" – and maybe throw in a gif of that robot cat rolling its eyes – and she'd be raking it in by teatime.
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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