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Discover LudwigThe phrase "shooting rockets" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is commonly used to describe the action of launching or firing rockets. Example: The military conducted a training exercise by shooting rockets into the night sky. In this sentence, "shooting rockets" is used to describe the action of launching rockets as part of a military exercise.
Exact(27)
The airplanes were shooting rockets at the people running away.
… Nobody will feed them for just shooting rockets.
Many here said they saw little distinction between Hamas's shooting rockets into civilian areas of Israel and Israel's shooting rockets into civilian areas of Gaza, even if Hamas militants were operating there or just hiding out.
Israel's leaders said a central aim of the 22-day military offensive was to deter the militants from shooting rockets.
Israel's leaders said a central aim of the military offensive was to deter the militants from shooting rockets.
They flew low, shooting rockets right here," she said, pointing at the entrance to the gynecology ward.
Similar(33)
It shoots rockets or bullets.
I guess it's fun, because you shoot rockets up in the air.
Outside, a group of teenage boys declared, "If any more rockets come, we will shoot rockets at Arsal".
It's like somebody in Wellesley Hills [a Boston suburb] trying to shoot rockets at MIT.
By the 1960s, the Japanese defense department moved in and shot rockets and missiles from its coasts.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com