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Discover Ludwig"root around" is a correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It means to search or rummage through something in a thorough and determined manner. Example: I had to root around in my messy drawer to find my missing keys.
Exact(60)
Next is his evidence -- it's all there, but the reader has to root around for it.
Domestication was easy, given that they loved to root around in dump sites.
When you root around in the history books, you realize there's little consensus about anything.
Elsewhere, as on "Stones That Only Have," they root around like a couple of grumbling wildebeests.
Better, with evangelistic hopes like McWhorter's, to root around for the language's exceptional qualities: "up" and all the rest.
I'll leave it to others to root around for any feminist messages in Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates.
But the idea that external researchers could come and root around in their archive was long considered taboo.
But Mr. Pray, who tends to glide rather than dig, doesn't root around in Doc's psychology or the family's hurt.
It's a laboratory in which Ms. Lo can root around, paying special heed to grilling and smoking and occasionally exploring the similarities of hoisin and Western barbecue sauces.
To celebrate their new album we asked them to root around in the record boxes and pull out the 45s that mean the most to them.
Father Freeman, 63, agreed, saying that the New Melleray community had also had to root around for monastically appropriate ways to earn money.
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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