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Discover Ludwig'sprang out' is correct and usable in written English.
It means to move or to leap with sudden energy and can be used in different contexts such as physical activity or movement, or metaphorical expression. Example sentence: When the alarm went off, he sprang out of bed.
Dictionary
sprang out
verb
Simple past tense of spring out
Exact(58)
Suddenly with a toddler, they sprang out at me everywhere.
NHA sprang out of despair at the Lib Dem's failure to act over the bill.
The documentaries start at the beginning, when the school system sprang out of pretty much nothing.
Stuffing sprang out from the seats of the chairs, and cigarettes burned in tins on their arms.
They just sprang out, like a sneeze, 'Oh, to hell with it.' And a great darkness fell over the earth".
One item in this welter of information sprang out and struck us: our child is Below Average in Deydreaming.
It is alleged two men wearing balaclavas then sprang out and threatened the pair with a rifle before fleeing empty-handed.
The creation of Robbins's first triumph, "Fancy Free" (1944), is exhilarating in the retelling, as is that of the musical that sprang out of it, "On the Town".
By Alice Frankforter The New Yorker, March 21 , 1931 P. 78While taking her dog jax for a walk, young Peter, her nephew sprang out upon her.
Dancers dressed in thigh-high leather boots and thongs sprang out from behind a glittery curtain, putting on an S-and-M-theme show.
When the man arrived and took off his pants, Edward "sprang out of the darkness with a knife," the prosecutor said.
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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