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"working freely" is a correct and usable expression in written English.
You can use it to refer to someone who is working in an unhindered or unrestricted manner. For example, "The new software allowed him to work freely without any restrictions."
Exact(15)
"Now the resistance is working freely".
The public sometimes assumes that teenage girls in the sex trade are working freely, without coercion.
(Only citizens of Romania and Bulgaria are restricted from working freely in Britain, and they will gain that right in January when temporary restrictions imposed by Britain lapse).
"However, should the NFF still be embroiled in court actions or any other issue preventing it from working freely on that date, the suspension will be automatically confirmed until all problems have been definitively solved," added Fifa.
But that feeling will also proliferate in sets by the Matt Wilson Quartet, the William Parker Quartet and the J. D. Allen Trio, excellent bands working freely within what everyone can recognize, broadly, as the jazz tradition.
But there are a lot of political controls that prevent a photographer from working freely in these places, so there is risk involved — physical risk, financial risk, the risk of time lost or wasted.
Similar(45)
Mrs. Shirzad, 42, walks and works freely in Kabul.
"We can work freely, comfortably now" with men, she said.
Membership confers the right to work freely within the Union.
They work freely here and that's it.
With independent journalists unable to work freely in Syria, such accounts cannot be confirmed.
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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