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The phrase "a big note" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a note that is physically large or when emphasizing the importance of the note's content.
Example: "I left a big note on your desk to remind you about the meeting tomorrow."
Alternatives: "a large note" or "an important note".
Exact(22)
"This finding, understated in both the study's conclusion and in the press release, introduces a big note of caution.
Now a mutual fund company is sounding a big note of caution in a new advertising campaign.
This is a big note of thanks for recognizing the graduate school and putting a graduate student on the cover of PAW's Reunions and Commencement issue (July 10).
And a big note of congratulations to professor of science writing Tom Levenson, who this year was awarded a fellowship by the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation.
But when he revisits his own catalog here, he's riveting and surprising: leaning dangerously into phrases on "Only One for Me," ostentatiously holding a big note on "One Last Cry," playing determined piano on "Never Felt This Way".
There are moments during tonight's lean, hungry headline set – 40 minutes, no encore – where Ware holds a big note then whips her head away from the microphone, pulling back from the overkill.
Similar(38)
So you want to leave on a big note with that big scoop--and I had a story I had been working on since 2003--.
So I don't think I could've finished on a bigger note".
But he was convincing and smooth, with a decent big note (which Idol audiences love).
From the start something wasn't quite right: he would murmur a few lines, find his voice in time to deliver a few big notes, then ask the audience to fill in the gaps.
"It got to be this big note, a lot of money," Mr. Domenici said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com