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The phrase 'take something in' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to refer to someone learning, understanding, or absorbing information or knowledge. For example, you might say: "I need to take this information in before making a decision."
Exact(13)
If possible, take something in writing with an account number and your notification of fraudulent activity.
I tried to pack, but would take something in each hand and stare at them in confusion.
"It's a very emotional activity to dig and excavate and record," one archaeologist who's researching the beginnings of tool use says, "because you know that you are the first one after the hominid to touch something and take something in your hand".
For your fridge to know what's inside it, either you have to scan the packaging every time you take something in or out (else your fridge will think it contains 14,000 milk cartons), or the food inside the fridge has to be able to "tell" the fridge about itself.
This is a prize that asks mayors to innovate – to try something new, to take something in a whole new direction.
It's rare to finish school and land a dream job, so if you have to take something in the interim, find a job that will be a stepping stone towards your long-term goals.
Similar(47)
He did not have much to volunteer other than that he took something in 2001 and 2002 but he quit in spring training of 2003 after he injured his neck.
But the sentencing of some who wandered into already vandalised shops and took something in a Worrall Thompson-type moment of madness seems disproportionate.
He absorbed the elements of popular storytelling, and created his own charged rhetoric of emotions — the climaxes extending to almost unbearable lengths, the faces turned upward as the camera moves rapidly or gravely toward someone who's taking something in.
"Asking for reparations is just stupid," one commented "They [owe] us nothing... even if they have taken something in the past.
Also making the teeth gnash is this: "Giving back" implies having taken something in the first place, something not yours, then giving back as restoration, as recompense.
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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