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Discover Ludwig"soon fade away" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to describe something that is expected to quickly or abruptly disappear or come to an end. For example: "After the summer rain had come and gone, the river's swelling quickly began to soon fade away."
Exact(14)
— that would soon fade away.
Those laughs soon fade away, as laughs will.
Some pieces that seem trendy at their birth soon fade away.
But it is so quiet inside, and the woodland setting so private, that fears and inhibitions soon fade away.
Though the specific influences (Mr. Glass's cycling figuration, Debussy's shimmering harmonies) soon fade away, the work retains a rhythmically insistent, almost motoric quality to the very end.
It reminds us that nothing is for ever, and that just as the sun sets, the moon wanes and the leaves fall, we will also all too soon fade away.
Similar(46)
Intellectually, his Marxism soon faded away.
However, if the peripheral stimulus is regular, it soon fades away, and becomes invisible.
Now if all this had happened, say, five years ago, their conviction might have soon faded away.
Take the Red Pirates catamaran round the island for a secluded barbecue or go horseriding to private nooks and crannies and the idea of over-development soon fades away.
She seemed to know who he was, and who the woman who looked after her was — with the help of this woman, he was able to keep her at home — but her attempts to talk, and to understand what was going on around her, had soon faded away.
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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