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The phrase "spring has sprung" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is a common idiom that means the season of spring has arrived or begun. Example: After months of cold weather, the trees are finally blooming and the birds are chirping - it's clear that spring has sprung.
Exact(55)
THE calendar says spring has sprung.
Spring has sprung, the grass has ris'.
Spring has sprung and developers are getting green-fingered.
For most of the world, spring has sprung.
Not a good sight for Michigan Avenue on 20 March, even if spring has sprung".
This week, App Smart was all about gardening because spring has sprung, or is about to.
Similar(5)
HIS entourage landed in a thunder storm, but Wen Jiabao, China's prime minister, still insisted that spring had sprung when he visited Japan for three days last week.
It may not have been the season in which Patrick Kavanagh "met her first and knew", but there was a real feeling — or hope at least — that spring had sprung.
Now that spring had sprung and the temperature was rising outside, the restaurant would adjust its use of water and use ice to stop the pizza dough from rising too fast, he said.
But three more months went by, the leaf count was down to 11, spring had sprung and to me it just looked like we had a large dead tree in our front yard.
Springtime has sprung.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com