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The phrase "a dangerous set of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a collection of items, ideas, or circumstances that pose a risk or threat.
Example: "The investigation revealed a dangerous set of chemicals that were improperly stored in the facility."
Alternatives: "a perilous group of" or "a risky collection of".
Exact(5)
EVEN by Russian standards, this is a dangerous set of circumstances.
He has a dangerous set of backs, although he needs the Will Genia of old at scrum-half, and options in the back row.
This is a dangerous set of instincts for a commander in chief with sole and unchecked authority over almost 4,000 nuclear weapons, nearly 1,000 of which could be fired within a few minutes.
But as ludicrous as the plot developments have been this season, Homeland's real crime is that it's peddling a dangerous set of lies about terrorism, American omnipotence and the very nature of international politics.
Without input from Democrats and without even an amendment process, they crafted a dangerous set of rules that threatens not just the way Congress works, but puts American jobs on the line as well.
Similar(55)
Forced to retire, Hering took up a career with a less dangerous set of keys: long-haul trucking.
Setterholm has temporarily slowed over the years by an occasional dangerous set of waves and a couple of nasty bike accidents.
Yet Labour has replaced that missed target by an equally dangerous set of targets for reducing waiting times.
Yet there also some sentiments in these early pages of the glossy title that have their echoes in an equally dangerous set of trends and fads around pregnancy and birth today.
While these figures lurk in contrast to the lectured cultural norms professed in our communities, they are accompanied by a far more dangerous set of statistics with a pretty basic bottom line: even if you don't talk to your kids about sex, someone else will.
Meanwhile, the association's core beliefs are under attack -- and misrepresented, the group's leadership would argue -- by the author William McGowan, whose recent book, "Coloring the News," argues that newsrooms, in their quest for diversity, have donned a new and dangerous set of blinkers that keep them from close examination of issues like race and feminism.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com