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Discover Ludwig"spit from" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is often used to describe an action of forcefully projecting saliva or another substance from one's mouth. Example: The angry man spat from his balcony, hitting the car below with a mouthful of water.
Exact(32)
Occasional rain spit from the skies.
Ah, so you spit from a height when staff offend you, I say.
A disappointment of trains, failing each time to spit from their insides the girl Julian had fought with in Strasbourg.
"Fifty-fvie and 65, you wipe like spit from chin," Heaton observes on "It's a Young Man's Game".
He does some light jogging and stands on the sideline catching hundreds of balls spit from a machine.
Last night I had to leave to go to play a show in London, and I'm covered in spit from a 1-year old boy.
Similar(28)
It was Hazard's low shot, spat from distance, that Heurelho Gomes spilled for Batshuayi to ram in the equaliser.
A few short tugs and away I went, feverishly winding in my reel, salt water spitting from the wet line.
He and a 17-year-old Qaissy tribesman, Ali Hussain, stared at flames spitting from the refinery's chimneys.
In March 2014, a British Airways plane heading to Lyon, France, was forced to turn back to Heathrow after flames were seen "spitting" from the engine of the Airbus A319.
To scan the table of contents is to have one's impressions confirmed: the slender column contains 17 entries, most no more than a single grim word ("Thorns," "Gut," "Hoarding," "Burqa"), like pearls spat from a queen's mouth.
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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