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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a big crack" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a large fissure or break in a surface, such as a wall, pavement, or object.
Example: "After the earthquake, there was a big crack in the foundation of the house."
Alternatives: "a large fissure" or "a significant break".
Exact(23)
"I heard a big crack.
"We heard a big crack and the whole floor disappeared.
Basically, it came off as a big crack vial floating in a puddle of deadly microbes.
"There wasn't a big crack in that window to do what he needed to do".
"Our house has a big crack in the floor, but we were lucky it is still there".
"I looked up at the wall and there's a big crack at the side of the back door.
Similar(37)
There was a middle-aged lady who'd been beaten up by her pimp and was giving a big crack-addled speech about what happenened to her in a wailing broken English / Albanian drawl.
Of course, Monkey Island – 25 years young in 2015 – isn't an open-world affair like Far Cry 4. It's essentially a series of screens assembled into small environments – a town here, a fort there, a great big crack if that's what you're into – and linked by birds-eye-view maps, which you used to point a miniature Guybrush at his next destination.
Look how wary, how destabilised you feel in a building with a great big crack down the middle.
Of course, Monkey Island 25 years young in 2015 isn't an open-world affair like Far Cry 4. It's essentially a series of screens assembled into small environments a town here, a fort there, a great big crack if that's what you're into and linked by birds-eye-view maps, which you used to point a miniature Guybrush at his next destination.
"It's a really big crack.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com