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The phrase "settle in in" is not correct in written English
You can use the phrase "settle in" to mean that someone is getting used to a new situation. For example, "After a few weeks in the new city, she began to settle in."
Exact(4)
I barely felt I had time to settle in in France but was much more into the swing of things once I got to Spain".
"Singapore is an easy place to settle in, in terms of culture and distance from China," said Mrs. Ong of DTZ.
I had learned that they were happy in a little shade, and the peony and the tulip could be left where they were to settle in in the dappled light beneath the coyote willows.
Beckham (who has done some amusing star turns with the host on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show," most recently as an "employee" at a Target store trying to interest shoppers in a new perfume that went viral on the Internet) and his wife, Victoria, have appeared to settle in in Los Angeles.
Similar(55)
If she feels settled in, settle in.
Only around 13,000 have settled in in Ajuong Thok.
I thought he'd settled in in London and was doing fine.
And other species, rarely seen in the bay then, have settled in, in large numbers.
The first American Pugsley was Matthew, who settled in in Bronx County & married Mary Hunt, of Hunts Point in 1686.
The couple eventually settled in in the rundown area around the Gare du Midi in Brussels where many Muslims live.
The worrying thing for Chelsea's title rivals is that he has already settled in in every other way.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com