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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a case of rolls" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a specific quantity or instance of rolls, such as food items or items in a collection.
Example: "At the bakery, I ordered a case of rolls for the event this weekend."
Alternatives: "a box of rolls" or "a batch of rolls."
Similar(60)
His last visit to the hospital had been subsequent to subsequent an arrest for lifting a case of hot-dog rolls from Woolworth's.
In the argument before the Master of the Rolls, a case of Wright v. Lord Dorchester (3) has cited as an au [3 Russ.
Several rugged-looking young men sat out on the back porch finishing a case of beer, nodding as we rolled up.
The player-caddie relationship has often been compared to a marriage, so this week there is a case of the old '70s rock 'n' roll theme of "love the one you're with" going on at the Greenbrier.
But just as the cameras are about to roll, Val develops a case of hysterical blindness.
She got a case of Poland Spring for $3.77 and a 15-roll pack of Bounty paper towels for $10.99.
England had needed Moeen's impetus for this was not a case of Bell, seeing his partner on a roll, giving him the strike and sitting back to enjoy the ride.
Since November 1999, excise and customs duty in Australia is levied as a specific duty on each cigarette, with an equivalent duty per kilogram of tobacco in the case of roll-your-own smoking tobacco and cigars and cigarettes weighing more than 0.8 grams [ 15].
For flying qualities longitudinal and lateral motions are supposed decoupled but inertial roll coupling may appear in case of roll reversal manoeuvres and yield to divergence in pitch or yaw.
"In the case of Rolls-Royce, the incident must be seen in the context of long-standing competitive rivalry between Boeing and Airbus, and between Pratt & Whitney/GE and Rolls-Royce".
The differences between the data from the control group in the present study (the majority of whom were British English speakers) and the American English speakers reported in Kita and Özyürek (2003) were unexpected and, in the case of "roll" in particular, were striking.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com