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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bit of hype" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small amount of excitement or publicity surrounding something, often implying that it may be exaggerated or not entirely warranted.
Example: "The new product launch generated a bit of hype, but many customers were disappointed with its performance."
Alternatives: "a touch of excitement" or "a little bit of buzz".
Exact(17)
One Arsenal player never afraid of a bit of hype is Nicklas Bendtner.
"New Renaissance" may be a bit of hype, but a profound transformation lies ahead for the practice of history.
"It's probably a bit of hype". Robert Haslam from mobile app company Mubaloo agrees.
Kirkham told BBC South East Today: "After the Olympic Games there's quite a bit of hype about hockey.
A classic L.A. booster, Ross named his strip Miracle Mile as a promise, a come- on, a bit of hype.
Naturally, there's been quite a bit of hype (with both its good and bad consequences).
Similar(43)
A bit of hope.
So does that mean O2 definitely has the iPhone deal - or is it a bit of hopeful hype from Carphone Warehouse, the company that runs mobiles.co.uk.
Most large-screen televisions sold today are capable of displaying upward of 800 lines of resolution (a bit of marketing hype because 500-line DVD images are the sharpest you can get with regular, analog TV).
"We're just doing an ethnographic interview!" "You know," Abrams says as we stroll toward the wide and silent street, "maybe the term ethnography is a bit of verbal hype.
He noted that for many sites, there's a bit of a "hype cycle," where they'll post every trailer and every piece of news or speculation about a big movie, but once it's actually out in theaters, the discussion dies off.
More suggestions(19)
a bit of advertising
a bit of commotion
a bit of exaggeration
a bit of upheaval
a bit of image
a bit of rage
a bit of overstatement
a bit of picture
a bit of coverage
a bit of unrest
a bit of pattern
a kind of hype
a bit of fashion
a bit of style
a bit of uproar
a bit of fanfare
a degree of hype
a bit of vanity
a decade of hype
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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