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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bulkhead" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a dividing wall or barrier, especially in ships, aircraft, or buildings.
Example: "The ship's design included a bulkhead to separate the cargo area from the living quarters."
Alternatives: "a partition" or "a dividing wall".
Exact(60)
"Instead of having a bulkhead for a sign," Mr. Daly said, "we have what may be a bulkhead for a sign plus additional floor space over the sidewalk".
The beach has a bulkhead, and a shed for storing kayaks.
The disturbed man wheeled, grabbed her and tossed her into a bulkhead.
"And down below," said Hancock, "a bulkhead disintegrated into a thousand bits of carbon".
'Face the bulkhead!' they ordered, but I didn't know what a bulkhead was.
A bulkhead of an oil tanker is chosen for this investigation.
McGriff continued to flourish; it's just that there was a bulkhead of bulked-up players clogging the top spots.
The site has created a need not felt elsewhere: a bulkhead sea wall repair is being done for $7.2 million.
In the smoking room, Petty Officer Ashley had been thrown about 20 feet, fracturing his skull against either metal equipment or a bulkhead doorjamb.
The officials said some parts related to the plane's high-powered propulsion system were being redesigned and a bulkhead in the fuselage reinforced.
He said he and another man wrestled the man onto a bulkhead, then to the floor, before Mr. Smith seized the weapon and threw it under a table.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com