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The phrase "a common bit of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a frequently encountered or typical piece of information, advice, or behavior.
Example: "It's a common bit of advice to save a portion of your income for emergencies."
Alternatives: "a typical piece of" or "a usual amount of".
Exact(1)
YEGG is a common bit of crosswordese, but here the clue's witty misdirection elevates it from being an annoyance.
Similar(58)
It is a remarkably common bit of baseball.
At the heart of the program is a "clustering" algorithm that locates acoustic similarities between songs, like common bits of rhythm, harmonies or keys.
For example, a pet's name or the name of your high school are common bits of information you post to social media sites.
In each round, all readers send a common query of bits and await responses over a frame of time slots.
It began with a reverie of a mixed grill of fish — which is, at least as far as I am aware, not that common, a little bit of a few things rather than a huge slab of one — and progressed with a trip to the fish store with my daughter, whom I encouraged to do the selecting.
With common sense, a bit of research, and the tips listed below, a new investigator can prepare a realistic budget and manage it successfully.
Where regulation is necessary, we'll ensure environmental laws are effective, proportionate, coherent and implemented in a way that uses a bit of common sense to minimise unnecessary burdens on business.
There needn't be a rulebook, just a bit of heartfelt common sense.
In 2009, MyungKeun [17] created a virtual bit vector for each source by taking bits uniformly at random from a common one-dimension bit array instead of the two-dimensional bit array to store the flow record and the flow number.
I'm like the acceptable face of trans in the UK because I look like a woman so people are prepared to treat me like one, even though I'm common, slutty, generally a bit of a major bitch and, for whatever reason, still have people out there in the world telling me I'm not really a woman.
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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