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The phrase "a big surplus" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to an excess amount of something, typically in financial or resource contexts.
Example: "The company reported a big surplus in its annual budget, allowing for new investments and employee bonuses."
Alternatives: "a large surplus" or "a significant surplus".
Exact(33)
There was a big surplus.
India enjoys a big surplus on service trade.
What should we do with a big surplus?
And that is, we have a big surplus.
In the 1990s, there was a big surplus.
Such a big surplus of people gave birth to the worker's colonies.
Similar(27)
Germany, which runs a bigger surplus than China, is deeply opposed.
I'd have a bigger surplus to spend by taxing corporations more.
But it also has a bigger surplus of vehicles on dealer lots than its competitors -- an 86-day surplus of cars and trucks, according to Mr. Healy, compared with 72 for G.M. and 65 for Ford.
Spain's government would have had to engineer a severe depression to prevent a blow-out in its current-account gap.That didn't suggest to him that no fiscal efforts would have been justified; a bigger surplus would likely have made sense.
But if saving Social Security is the chief goal, then fewer spending initiatives, the same tobacco revenues and a bigger surplus would be better; particularly since some of Mr Clinton's supposedly costless ideas may turn out to be nothing of the sort.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com