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The phrase "a big stone" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a stone that is large in size.
Example: "He stumbled upon a big stone while hiking in the forest."
Alternatives: "a large rock" or "a hefty boulder."
Exact(41)
We lived in a big stone tenement.
You're a big Stone Roses fan.
Looking desperately around her, she picked up a big stone.
Milton is a big stone that teachers put around a student's neck.
It looked like a holly berry and was very sour but sweet, with a big stone.
Mr. Stillman sat on a big stone and watched the green globe bobbing on its way.
Similar(19)
The house was slate gray with bright green shutters, with a screened-in a porch, a big stone-built functional fireplace, an actual breakfast nook, and came complete with old and funky Art Deco furniture and eerie, almost morbid, but strangely beautiful canvases of dreamy fallen angels and glamorous androgynous waifs painted by our sweetheart of a land lady.
You never know when a bigger stone might turn up.
This is one of the deepest stations in the city — miners came from around the country to dig it — and yet when you take the elevator up top and walk a few steps, you are at the highest natural elevation on Manhattan, Bennett Park, where a little tablet marks the spot on a bigger stone.
Studied stone columns in a bigger stone columns group and surrounding soil are considered as unit cells.
The eyewitness said one of the latter "put a very big stone" on Mr Barati's head.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com