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Discover Ludwig"a considerable buzz" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It typically means a high level of excitement or enthusiasm about something. For example: "There was a considerable buzz around the new product launch."
Exact(4)
None the less, Gold by Giles has attracted a considerable buzz.
The controversy, he added, has built a considerable buzz about the movie.
As a product category, the so-called Internet appliance generated a considerable buzz toward the end of last year.
After building up a considerable buzz for a new band with the iTunes single of the week, a tour and a movie license, we got a letter from some certain celebrity's estate saying we had to change our name.
Similar(55)
Rock Band may have been a hit among video game critics and a source of considerable buzz, but as a business, it has been a dud for the media conglomerate, which said on Thursday it was in talks to sell Harmonix, the maker of the music video game.
Snakes on a Plane generated considerable buzz on the Internet after Josh Friedman's blog entry and mentions on several Internet portals.
Just three weeks before its US release, he succeeded in persuading the MPAA to downgrade the rating to a more commercially friendly R. With Oscar season in full swing, film-makers are wooing, schmoozing and boozing Academy voters quicker than you can say "for your consideration", and there's considerable buzz surrounding Gosling and Williams.
"There has been a considerable media buzz around all of the books on the shortlist, and literary punters have staked more money in total on Tom McCarthy to win than any of the other authors, so he is a worthy favourite," said spokesman Graham Sharpe.
Adding to the book's considerable buzz is the fact that a film adaptation is already in the works.
Immediately, a prominent Venetian architect and historian named Antonio Foscari published the first of several articles in Il Gazzettino, proposing a radical modification of the project and creating considerable buzz.
And there is already considerable buzz about Robert Altman's "Company," a backstage ballet film scheduled to open in December, with remakes following next year of "Dirty Dancing" (set in Cuba under the title "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights"), and "Shall We Dance?," in which Richard Gere and Jennifer Lopez play the shy businessman and the beautiful ballroom dance teacher of the 1997 Japanese film.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com