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The phrase "roving through" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means to wander or move around aimlessly or without a specific direction. Example: The children spent the afternoon roving through the forest, picking up sticks and chasing each other. In this sentence, "roving through" indicates that the children are wandering and exploring without a set route or plan.
Exact(18)
Previously, Brooks's men had headed back to the heavily fortified Camp Victory after roving through Ghazaliya.
This first part of the movie has a claustrophobic chamber-drama feel to it, with the camera roving through a single set, in long, long takes.
And lo and behold, if he doesn't land it as surely as James Joyce did when he sent Leopold Bloom roving through Dublin in "Ulysses".
Combining original poetry with the most naked of clichés, Mr. Maxwell finds the epic in the American everyday as surely as James Joyce did when he sent Leopold Bloom roving through Dublin (1 20).
A new Border Patrol unit has been roving through Hispanic neighborhoods well north of the Mexican border since June 1 to arrest more than 420 people suspected of being illegal immigrants.
It proved more challenging than she had anticipated to teach Pransky, accustomed to roving through meadows unleashed, to ignore everything from food to wheelchairs to other dogs and interact politely with people who were ill, fragile, sometimes uprooted and often demented.
Similar(42)
With the pianist Francis Vasta, he portrays "A Wand'ring Minstrel" as he roves through Gilbert and Sullivan's "Mikado" and other operetta favorites by Victor Herbert, Franz Lehar and others.
Ilsanker punched a hole in midfield, roved through it, and banged in a shot that required a Patrício save to his left.
For nearly an hour, the pair, wearing black trench coats and carrying assault weapons, roved through their school, killing 12 students and one teacher and wounding 24 others before they killed themselves.
But the new janitors, formed into "fast teams," rove through the courthouses with mops and buffers, attacking long-ignored corners and years of wax buildup that would have made Mr. Clean cringe.
(A less highbrow recent example is the 2012 young adult novel "Every Day," by David Levithan). But Riker brings a unique, cheerfully grotesque sensibility to his crack at this hallucinatory mini-genre, emphasizing the bleakest aspects of his premise as he roves through a swath of the past half-century of American life.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com