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'strong verbs' is correct and usable in written English.
It is an umbrella term used to refer to verbs that express an action or occurrence with great intensity or vividness. For example: "Her voice reverberated with strong verbs as she told the story of her journey."
Dictionary
strong verbs
noun
Plural of strong verb
Exact(11)
Another tip: Use strong verbs.
Strong verbs have five forms: ride, rides, rode, riding, ridden.
In some Northern dialects strong verbs retain the old past-tense singular forms band, brak, fand, spak for standard English forms bound, broke, found, and spoke.
Strong verbs also retain the past participle inflection -en as in comen, shutten, sitten, and getten or gotten for standard English come, shut, sat, and got.
Verbs inflect for tense only, with -r as the usual present marker (New Norwegian does not have an ending to indicate present tense in the strong verbs), while the preterites (past tenses) have stem-vowel ablaut changes in the strong verbs and a dental suffix in the weak verbs.
Gothic also had a fourth class: full-nō-da 'it became full.' Many Proto-Germanic strong verbs showed a consonant alternation between *f and *ƀ, *þ and *ð, *x and *ǥ, and *s and *z that was the result, through Verner's law, of the alternating position of the Proto-Indo-European accent.
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Standard Afrikaans is lexically extremely close to Dutch but has a markedly simplified morphology (e.g., lost are person and number markings on verbs, strong verb root alternations, and nominal gender) and a number of syntactic innovations (e.g., double-negation with mandatory clause-final nie).
The past showed two innovations: (1) In the "strong" verb, Germanic transformed Proto-Indo-European ablaut into a specific tense marker (e.g., Proto-Indo-European *bher-, *bhēr-, *bhēr-, *bhṛ- in Old English beran 'bear,' past singular bær, past plural bæron, past participle boren).
±: This poll reports that one frequently written-about candidate has experienced a 2-point drop, which we could make into a bigger deal than it is if we just use a super strong verb like "PLUMMETING" or "COLLAPSING".
One strong verb steamrolls any three weak ones.
A well-defined subject, strong verb, and object are much better than a long, complicated sentence that goes nowhere.
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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