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The phrase "swiftly running" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is moving quickly or with speed, often in a literal sense, such as a person or an animal. Example: "The deer was swiftly running through the forest, evading the hunters behind it."
Exact(5)
"Ah, Damon!" he begins, and they hug, before swiftly running out of words, his English being little better than the Englishman's French.
With less than two weeks before Apple Music pops up on Apple devices around the world, the indie music industry is swiftly running out of time to negotiate more favourable terms for compensation.
While making a radio programme at the end of the last century (imagine being able to use that wing-collared phrase), I went down the mine at Nenthead, along a herringbone brick tunnel, knee-deep in swiftly running water.
BAGHDAD, Oct. 31 - Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi issued repeated warnings today that negotiations with the rebels who hold Falluja are swiftly running out of time, saying that unless his government is allowed to establish control immediately, he will ask the American and Iraqi forces massed around the town to attack.
A school, known as No. 7 Infantry Training Centre, was opened at Wilsons Promontory, Victoria, which was described as "an isolated area of high, rugged and heavily timbered mountains, precipitous valleys, swiftly running streams, and swamps".
Similar(52)
'To run swiftly' or 'swiftly to run' is correct; not 'to swiftly run'".
But the politics of equality — forget liberation — swiftly ran into resistance.
But any politician who tries to reform the welfare state swiftly runs into trouble for a simple reason: it is very popular.
He made off with cash and credit cards, many of which were swiftly run up to their debt limits with illegal purchases or cash advances, Sergeant Molloy said.
There was the live vasectomy which I only need to start describing to men who annoy me, for them to swiftly run away, covering their ears.
Instead of being paralyzed by a sense of directionless menace, as would be the case with a generalized anxiety disorder where danger is everywhere and nowhere, the phobic can pour all dread into one vessel, and then swiftly run 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