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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a double handful of" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe a quantity that is roughly equivalent to two handfuls of something, often in a casual or informal context. Example: "She picked up a double handful of berries from the bush and added them to her basket."
Exact(8)
The doctor hands you a double handful of wailing flesh and tells you it lives with you now.
"This is a double handful of nothing.
At its very best (six or seven of the novels and a double handful of the short stories), it is like nothing that surrounds it in time and space.
A square is laid out in the centre of a table, its sides marked 1, 2, 3, and 4. The players put their bets on any of these numbers, after which the banker rings a bell to terminate the betting and empties onto the table a double handful of small coins, beans, buttons, or other small objects (numbering about 200), which he covers with a metal bowl.
By Lillian Ross Joshua Logan, co-author, co-producer, and director of "South Pacific," was busy last week, but we contrived to get a double handful of superficial data on him by wangling an invitation to sit in one of his two aisle seats during the first act of Wednesday evening's preview, the audience for which seemed to be made up mostly of war veterans and friends of the cast.
A double handful of other universities will be on the board of directors: Rice, Iowa State, Stanford, Rutgers, Stony Brook, UC Berkeley, and USC.
Similar(52)
Accompany Leyshon to Leddenton for a double-handful of the bleakest horrors imaginable.
The Shaker also comes preloaded with a double-handful of fun kids songs like "The Wheels On the Bus".
Interface and operation The button marked with an asterisk is assignable to one of a double-handful of functions — A-B repeat (a.k.a. section loop) made the most sense for my own needs, but it's set to Home by default.
But when he scooped a great double handful of water up to his cracked lips it turned back to sand and fell through his fingers.
Sitting on a makeshift stool, Joseph Rice, 41, scooped up another double handful of copper and silver from the bucket and spread it around a 3-foot-by-3-foot sieve, looking like an urban prospector.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com