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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a dazzle of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a group of something that is visually striking or impressive, often in a poetic or metaphorical context.
Example: "As the sun set, a dazzle of fireflies illuminated the garden, creating a magical atmosphere."
Alternatives: "a sparkle of" or "a shimmer of".
Exact(40)
34 min: Villa bewitches Spiranovic on the left with a dazzle of step-overs.
Upstairs on the dance floor, spotlights reeled in a dazzle of primary colors.
Dime store Japanese fans led, in a roundabout way, to obi belts and a dazzle of periwinkle.
Gabbana's memories are a dazzle of color, light, and speed — life as seen from the saddle of a motorino.
Bioshock Infinite was a visually glorious dash of American imagery and ideology, a dazzle of cultural references and intellectual invention.
The embrace of night is ideal when you are safely tucked up at high altitude; at ground level, a dazzle of daylight is what you need.
Similar(20)
And she always brought them to a metallic dazzle of a climax -- not just one but two, three or more.
Pickens's Lolita-esque affair with the thirteen-year-old empress, a blond "dazzle of a nymphet," is the narrative backbone of the Chinese émigré writer Da's sensual, if slim and breathless, novel.
At first, as you enter the turbine hall, you see a distant dazzle of whiteness and then you register that it consists of piles of boxes.
Troupes flashed by in a scanty dazzle of jewelled bras and barely-there thongs; there were flappers, flower maidens, lions and gods.
A Dazzling Story of Risk and Dangerous Liasions.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com