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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fat slice of" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe something that is large or plentiful. For example, "I had a fat slice of cake for dessert."
Exact(16)
You are holding a fat slice of watermelon.
Sony, of course, intends to cash out: it's a 360 deal, meaning the label gets a fat slice of touring and merch receipts.
It is brains.Matches made in New HavenIntellectual capital drives the knowledge economy, so those who have lots of it get a fat slice of the pie.
It's a New Yorker cover begging to be drawn: Manhattan culture vulture staring intently at a nude by Klimt, with overhead thought bubble showing coffee and whipped cream next to a fat slice of apple strudel.
There's a foie gras platter, too, with a fat slice of terrine and two D'Artagnan inventions, an armagnac-soaked prune stuffed with foie gras mousse and a piece of "Gascon sushi": foie gras wrapped in a slice of duck prosciutto.
And, goodness knows, Mr James Nesbitt deserves a fat slice of that luck, having put body, soul and acting chops through the wringer so comprehensively a couple of years ago in The Missing.
Similar(44)
That, they say, merits guaranteeing the state a fatter slice of the revenues.
The deal's major components also include boosting the sales tax on nonfood merchandise from 5percentto5.3percentcent and devoting a fatter slice of existing revenue to transportation instead of schools, public safety and other services.
So Scott and McArthur are exhorting their constituents to grasp the opportunity to seize back influence as part of that process, from taking greater local control over the seabed, to scrapping redundant oil and gas rigs, to getting a fatter slice of future oil and marine energy incomes.
And Perlman says he'll be able to offer game developers a fatter slice of the revenues than they can get by working with retail channels stuffed with middlemen.
For the moment, Spotify appears in an enviable position to capture a fatter slice of the emerging market for streaming music, but that moment may already be ending as enormous new competitors loom -- not the least Apple and Google.
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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