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The phrase "a block of bread" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a solid piece or loaf of bread, often in a culinary context.
Example: "I need to buy a block of bread for the sandwiches we're making for the picnic."
Alternatives: "a loaf of bread" or "a piece of bread".
Exact(1)
(Why have I put my own hand up?) The overall result was a block of bread denser than a Beckett novel, and harder to get into.
Similar(59)
On the side of the plate is a block of corn bread.
Owen pays them each one block of bread: a third of the value of the goods they made.
Hundreds had gathered, and were amusing themselves with the assortment of gilded kitsch they found on the property: monogrammed golf clubs, Yanukovych-branded bottles of vodka, a block of gold shaped like a loaf of bread.
But every week they have to buy the necessities of life for which Owen charges... one block of bread.
Place a block of TNT.
Find a block of styrofoam.
The only dessert here, besides a dryish flan, is the capirotada, an austere block of Lenten bread pudding flavored with cinnamon, raisins and cheese.
The idea that I could actually bake such crusty, craggy, richly complex breads at home, without the help of packaged yeasts or machines that pop out blocks of bread with as much effort as brewing a pot of coffee, never occurred to me until I read "Nancy Silverton's Breads From La Brea Bakery" (Villard Books, 1996; $30).
It's all done with blocks of bread.
His workmates laugh as Owen's blocks of bread – his profits – pile up, the rich getting richer the poor staying poor.
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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