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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fan that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a specific type of fan or to indicate a particular characteristic of the fan.
Example: "She is a fan that always supports her favorite team, no matter the outcome."
Alternatives: "a supporter who" or "an enthusiast that".
Exact(60)
Most of the electricity powers a fan that makes the stove more efficient, thereby saving fuel.
"You get a fan that comes down there and expresses what he feels abut you.
The projector has a fan that can make a distracting noise.
PROFESSOR: This looks like a fan that was also demonstrated in the World's Fair, a few years ago.
"I didn't know that there was a fan that actually ran onto the mound," Mr. Santana said on Saturday.
"There's a fan that tweets me every day," he says, "telling me the number of days until it starts.
We all talk about love as if it wasn't a word you can open like a fan, that doesn't mean completely different things to different people".
Make sure you add a fan that sounds like a vacuum cleaner if you do build one though.
Sharon Sydney is a fan that met Michael Jackson in Gary Indiana in 2004.
Waterhouse is in the same vein as Mayer Hawthorne, a fan that became an ambassador for the past.
Inside, guard Patrick Beverley tried to remain calm describing an exchange with a fan that resulted in his ejection three minutes into the fourth quarter.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com