Exact(1)
When a horse has a bad leg, they will compensate with the opposite leg to support themselves and eventually the good legs turn foul.
Similar(57)
If it turns foul.
His breath – never exactly a bed of roses – turned foul.
The weather turned foul and the English fleet was trapped in port.
A line-drive down the right-field line that turned foul by just a couple of inches.
Soon the odor turned foul, and several girls began complaining of headaches and sore throats, both in that classroom and an adjacent one.
And sure enough, before too long the guns come out, and what was supposed to be a clean, bloodless crime turns foul and messy.
There are images of broken vessels, of a world in ruins, of rivers turned foul, and of things that cannot be made whole again.
Graziosa maintained during the four-day trial that his punch was only in self-defense, that a drunken Wells had threatened him and grabbed him by the collar after a pleasant conversation turned foul.
Quite a few players are out there gunslinging, to various degrees of success, having clearly decided that it's worth taking a run at the leaders before the weather turns foul.
Still, it is the image of men possibly huddled in the hull, banging for attention as the air turned foul and the sea churned through their sub, that will linger most.
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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