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The phrase 'take conscious' is not correct English.
To make the phrase grammatically correct, it should be written as 'take consciousness.' For example, "I try to take consciousness of how I'm feeling emotionally each day so that I can better manage my stress."
Exact(32)
And you may need to take conscious steps that make clear to others that you deserve their trust.
And all too often, crises occur when some official or officials take conscious choices under the mistaken impression that they will be relatively harmless.
Remember that if you don't take conscious control of your own work hours, the work hours can easily take control of you.
That's why it's often critical to take conscious and purposeful steps to reveal your motives and values and to open yourself so others can see inside you.
But vocalising something forces you to think about it, which means the sort of decisions previously taken on autopilot now take conscious mental effort.
If you know the feeling, then you may – like me – have to take conscious steps to ensure your comfort and well-being while you work.
Similar(28)
So it takes conscious work to shift the culture.
"The government has taken conscious steps to curtail imports of nonessential commodities, essentially precious metals.
He made, or haplessly fronted for, some execrable decisions, but hating him took conscious effort.
For him, remembering took conscious effort and a certain creative genius.
JEFFREY EUGENIDES: My interest took conscious form at least fifteen years ago when I read Michel Foucault's "Memoirs of a 19th Century French Hermaphrodite".
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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