Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bit of mail" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a small amount of mail or correspondence, often in a casual context.
Example: "I received a bit of mail today, mostly just advertisements and a couple of bills."
Alternatives: "a small amount of mail" or "a little mail".
Exact(1)
I do get quite a bit of mail, most of it undesirable, but all of it needing to be opened, and I was tired of working my fingernail under the envelope flap — glue these days is so gluey!
Similar(59)
And Amber Jones emails in to say: "Come watch my video, it's very stimulati... .. Eh, actually, that's a bit of junk mail.
This idealization reaches its height in her photo illustrations for Tennyson's " 'Idylls of the King,' and Other Poems"; the example here is a well-acted costume-drama involving quite a bit of chain mail.
By making your information confidential in the county and state databases you may eliminate quite a bit of junk mail.
Perhaps that is to keep the price down to make the iPad more attractive to a broader audience, who might just want a media-playback device with the ability to do a bit of e-mail, browsing and Facebook -- a bigger iPod touch, in other words.A third, more ambitious possibility is that the iPad is Apple's latest version of a "computer for the rest of us" just as the Macintosh was 26 years ago.
"I emailed Chris Morris after the referendum, actually, and said, 'You should do a one-off Brexit Brasseye' – you know, a bit of fan-mail – and he said, 'Well, the problem is it requires a form of authority to subvert for it to work, without that new tools are required.'".
Ethan Bronner's essay sampled a bit of the hate mail that invariably comes with this assignment.
Ochre showcases the three designers' work -- sleek sofas with a bit of slouch, chain mail chandeliers -- as well as the work of artisans, many of them friends from the London art and design world.
I'd like to reply with a bit of bite: "As I e-mailed yesterday, the proposal will go out tomorrow".
Every bit of mail had gone.
Is it such a big deal if the Daily Mail indulges a bit of mindless foreigner-bashing?
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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