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"a bit of hyperbole" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
Hyperbole refers to an exaggeration for the purpose of emphasis or effect. You can use this phrase when you want to subtly point out that someone has exaggerated a statement for the sake of emphasis. For example, "The candidate's statement that this year has been the most challenging was a bit of hyperbole."
Exact(35)
OK, a bit of hyperbole.
"It's a bit of hyperbole," he said.
Ouch (also a bit of hyperbole).
This government's job is to clean house.Sometimes that mission justifies a bit of hyperbole.
"Absolute crap" (though he later conceded this was a "bit of hyperbole").
There is bit of truth and a bit of hyperbole in that anger and anxiety.
Similar(24)
Frommer now dismisses this as a bit of Cameronian hyperbole, assuring me that he has nothing but respect for Okrand's masterwork.
The piece ended with what I assumed was a bit of dark hyperbole from Nathan Myhrvold, one of the pioneers of Microsoft.
Whether or not this nickname is a bit of local hyperbole, the construction of showy new palaces, often in a Mediterranean style with red Spanish-tiled roofs, persists on Malba's tree-lined streets.
AS she was sworn in a few months ago, Gov. Janet Napolitano, Democrat of Arizona, engaged in a bit of mournful hyperbole when she said she was about to govern a state that was nearly bankrupt.
The commentators could, of course, still offer a bit of intermittent hyperbole: "A breathtaking exercise of judicial power," is how the ABC correspondent Terry Moran characterized the court's potential decision, but such come-ons did not seem wholly out of line.
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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