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“a bliss” is not a grammatically correct sentence.
The word “bliss” is an abstract noun and cannot be used as if it were a physical noun. You could use the word “bliss” in a sentence like this: "The bride and groom experienced a feeling of bliss on their wedding day."
Exact(36)
A bliss like murder?
A spiral staircase leads down to a Bliss spa and a well-equipped fitness center.
One day followed another, a bliss of sameness — and I plotted a distraction.
And some enterprises are too happy, creating a bliss that no one wants to disturb with dissent.
It's a bliss that Taurasi knows well, having won three N.C.A.A. titles at Connecticut and two Olympic gold medals with Team USA.
It's nice and quiet to work at night: there's not many people about, driving to work is a bliss, and there's hardly any traffic.
Similar(23)
— Nick Fox The Los Angeles Times: As many Californians know, avocado and bacon can form a bliss-making partnership, particularly when they team up to crown a burger.
But the answer is quite simple: it's the husband or wife of a bliss-seeker who usually has to pick up the financial slack.
The two commence a blissed-out romance.
He eats both with a blissed-out intensity you rarely see in British chefs.
He has a blissed-out grin and an impish dusting of freckles.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com