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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bunk that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are describing a specific type of bunk or bed, often in informal or colloquial settings.
Example: "He decided to sleep on a bunk that was located in the corner of the room."
Alternatives: "a bed that" or "a sleeping area that".
Exact(1)
What could be better than a bunk that looks good literally from top to bottom?
Similar(59)
As I stowed my belongings in the dorm room and noted with some frustration that I was going to have to sleep on a top bunk that seemed to be seven feet off the ground, a stout, red-faced South African dude in a rugby jersey stumbled out of the communal bathroom.
Sprinklers resulted in visits to the feed bunk that were on average 23 to 27% longer and 13 to 16% less frequent compared with the control, perhaps because cows avoided walking through spray.
Once I'd dropped my bike off in the secure lock-up, I was shown to a bunk room that was light, airy and had stunning mountain views.
His father built a bunk bed that was part jungle gym, with all kinds of bars and levels, so Josh could climb and stretch his scarred underarms.
I managed to tick off 'sleepover' whilst contorted horribly in a bunk bed that was approximately two-and-a-half feet shorter than my body.
They grew up in a small house in blue-collar Middletown, Rhode Island, where bedtime was "a never-ending revolving search to nab one of a few fold-up cots or a bunk bed that was open," and breakfast could involve fighting "for the last glass of powdered milk," Flynn writes, in his book, "Field of Fight".
And try being in charge of a group of 7-year old kids and get them to clean a bunk...now that takes patience!
If you have a bunk bed that is wobbling around, it may be a good idea to buy a new one, especially if tightening the bolts and screws isn't helping.
In place of the small private room with a toilet/shower that tips out of the wall and a narrow ladder to the top bunk that accommodates a Gold passenger, a customer at the Platinum level gets a comfortable stateroom with a double Murphy bed and an attached small private bathroom.
(Penn & Teller's Showtime series, the title of which I can't print here, is part of this tradition, as is Johnny Carson's famous "Tonight" show humiliation of Uri Geller, who claimed to be able to bend spoons through telekinesis.) But the Nolans, eager to push the boundaries of their jaw-dropping parlor trick, introduce an element of bunk that compromises the coherence of the film's concept.
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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