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The phrase "a fault that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a specific error or flaw in a situation, behavior, or system.
Example: "There is a fault that needs to be addressed in the software before the next update."
Alternatives: "an error that" or "a mistake that".
Exact(60)
This is a fault that is hopefully in the past, though.
The Tohoku earthquake ruptured a fault that also generates slow slip events.
Experts said the earthquake could have involved a fault that has not moved for more than 10,000 years.
The 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake ruptured part of a fault that typically slips in slow, transient events.
The symbolism is a shade heavy-handed, a fault that has been found with Erdrich's books in the past.
With no new strain building up, a fault that broke to generate one of the major earthquakes is unlikely to break again.
The iPhone 6S has been hit with complaints from owners due to a fault that causes the phone's home button to become 'burning hot'.
The collection seemed to be about geometry: straight cuts, simplified to a fault, that made the body seem as if it were encased in a box.
Specifically, a fault that intersects the flow path between the injection and production wells without reaching them is treated.
EE has issued a recall for all its Power Bar portable chargers because of a fault that can cause overheating and a fire safety risk.
But the organisation has recently been hit by a series of problems, including a fault that meant payments have been delayed to civil service pensioners living overseas.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com