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The phrase "a bit of impulse" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small amount of spontaneous or instinctive behavior or action.
Example: "She made the decision to travel on a bit of impulse, feeling the need for adventure."
Alternatives: "a touch of spontaneity" or "a hint of instinct".
Exact(1)
Thanks to a bit of impulse control, I decided not to nick anything from the Zone.
Similar(59)
This is a problem between you and it is not my problem.' " During a long sushi dinner recently at a downtown restaurant, his switch from terrorist to counterterrorist remained a bit of a mystery — a combination perhaps of impulse, self-interest and rationalization.
Sex, the antidote you grasp for in youth, is less engaging when you are cloistered in a driver's room in the middle of nowhere; and politics, the other base impulse, is a bit of a nightmare these days.
But simply because a bit of misinformation resonates with the darkest impulses of conservatives doesn't mean they're entirely wrong.
A slim novel about a woman with self-destructive impulses and a bit of a heroin habit, Problems reads with the loping ease of a dark, mordant reverie.
"The reader always loves a bit of a jab, so I understand the impulse.
Sign up for The bendearingly, desperate to your impulseaily.
The dance impulse of Afro-Cuban music, then, proved a bit of a reach.
Probucol was a bit of dog; it had been pulled from the market in 1995 after it was found to disrupt the electrical impulses that guide the heart's rhythms.
A bit of hope.
A bit of decorum.
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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