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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a day into" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate the progression of time, typically referring to a specific point within a day or the duration of an event that has started earlier in the day.
Example: "We are now a day into our vacation, and we have already visited several attractions."
Alternatives: "one day into" or "a day into the event".
Exact(59)
Abuk made the one grain a day into a paste to make it last longer.
The women stack 10,000 cookies a day into plastic trays.
"A day into it, I got a sense of the story.
We continue to put about 2,000 troops a day into the country.
Hezbollah fires up to 100 rockets a day into northern Israel, with some aimed at Haifa and Tel Aviv.
"You're putting at least £100 a day into your car and you're riding for £2,000 races.
The plants had state permits to dump up to 30 pounds of spilled PCB's a day into the Hudson.
The mine would discharge up to three million gallons of waste water a day into the Clark Fork River.
That includes Kennedy International Airport, and wastewater treatment plants that dump 250 million gallons a day into Jamaica Bay.
It makes use of Gaussian Mixture Model clustering technique to group half-hour interval flat rate tariffs within a day into clusters to determine ToU tariffs.
Less than a day into the hunt our lounge began to resemble a disaster area, with papers strewn about and laptop cords monopolizing the right of way.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com