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The phrase "a common cold" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a frequent viral infection that affects the upper respiratory tract.
Example: "During the winter months, many people catch a common cold, leading to symptoms like a runny nose and sore throat."
Alternatives: "a typical cold" or "a frequent cold".
Exact(59)
"A day before you get any symptoms of a common cold, I'll know".
The collection includes a common cold virus, a dust mite, a bedbug and a stomachache.
We had been told this was not a concern and it was just a common cold.
"You have a common cold, which will get clear by itself".
Infection by Streptococcus bacteria may be a complication arising from a common cold.
Australia's Medicare Benefits Schedule contains around 6,000 items ranging from brain surgery to treatment for a common cold.
The world is in danger of going into cardiac arrest, yet we behave as if we've caught a common cold.
"A common cold will go from clear to yellow to green back to yellow to clear to gone".
Although it is now generally regarded more lightly than a common cold, this sickness used to kill.
At that point, most patients do not know if they have the flu or a common cold.
"Personally in a common cold in a young child, I wouldn't recommend these agents," Dr. Snodgrass said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com