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"slam into" is a perfectly acceptable phrase in written English.
It can be used to describe something literally or figuratively slamming into something else, usually with a lot of force. For example: "The runaway car slammed into the side of a building."
Exact(60)
What would you slam into Room 101?
We didn't want to slam into them.
Other people's matrices sometimes slam into our own.
I slam into the double doors, a crumpled heap.
Of course, a slam into the boards does not help.
I slam into the floor," he told the Post.
Without warning, gushes of water slam into them from both sides.
He hears her head slam into the closed door, as usual.
Before long, he'd be wondering if his career was about to slam into a wall.
Sometimes this tactic backfires when the opponents run from a failing slam into one that makes.
Just seen the #BayernMunich team bus slam into a helpless this car.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com