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Discover Ludwig"work loose" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a situation when something gets progressively looser from being tightened, fastened, or wound around something else. For example, "The screws on the shelves had worked loose."
Exact(17)
I work loose the spine.
The clove hitch rarely slips, but it can work loose with continuous tugging.
Gander, whose art merges painting and sculpture and writing, calls the subject of his work "Loose Associations" — in books and performative lectures, as well as documents and objects.
"My helmet strap started to work loose and my helmet was lifting down the straights, which was pulling the strap tight against my throat and choking me.
But it requires removing and replacing the valve, and unless done correctly, this can allow a valve to work loose over time.
At Lincoln Center the program will include Mr. Cunningham's latest work, "Loose Time," in addition to classics that span the company's five decades.
Similar(43)
One year, in addition to the three of us and my grandmother visiting from London, we had the usual navy men lined up (from the frigate HMS Leander, if I remember correctly), a couple of old Australian friends, and three of my dad's work loose-enders, one of them Japanese, one Indian and one Indonesian.
Water had gushed from a joint whose lead packing had worked loose.
He turned the boat frantically, the handle of the pan rattling and worked loose now.
They are jostling the construction, parts of which seem to be working loose.
A screw inserted to secure broken bones had worked loose, leading to further small breakages.
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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