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The phrase "you doing are" is not correct and usable in written English.
It does not follow the standard word order for forming questions or statements in English. Example: "You doing are well today?" is incorrect; it should be "Are you doing well today?"
Exact(4)
Unlike most text messages, tweets — usually in answer to Twitter's prompt, "What are you doing?" — are routed among networks of friends.
For example, the forms ja-o, kər-o in Gujarati təme kyã jao cho "Where are you going?" and šũ kəro cho "What are you doing?" are historically plurals but are used with reference to one person addressed by the pronoun təme.
He looked up Ms. Hodgkins's e-mail address in the Teach for America database and sent her out of the blue a to-the-point message containing three brief questions: "Where are you?" "How are you doing?" "Are you married?" Until that e-mail message, Ms. Hodgkins said, she thought marriage "just wasn't in the cards".
Turner lurched about the stage, licking her lips in a disturbingly vulgar way that was very appropriate for Martha ("Poor Georgie-Porgie, put-upon pie! Awwwwww... what are you doing? Are you sulking?").
Similar(54)
"'How are you doing?' is better".
What you did is unforgivable.
"What you did was wrong.
Everything you did was twisted.
All you do is beg".
You done been to every arena.
All you did was bronze your skin".
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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