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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fog in" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation where there is confusion or lack of clarity, often metaphorically.
Example: "There was a fog in the decision-making process, making it difficult for the team to reach a consensus."
Alternatives: "a haze in" or "a cloud over".
Exact(11)
"It's like a fog in my head," she said, trying to describe her feelings.
"Their second goal sprang us into life, we couldn't get out of a fog in the first 30 minutes," said Dyche.
And I asked her about her life, which I'd never done, having always assumed I just emerged from a fog in the 1980s.
"The war seems to be putting a fog in front of their eyes," said William D. Holiber, the publisher of U.S. News & World Report in New York.
Two years after the Titanic, a coal boat rammed the Empress of Ireland when the Liverpool-bound liner got stuck in a fog in the St Lawrence.
He emerged suddenly and unexpectedly into my line of vision, as if from a fog, in canvas parka and soft shoes, a tall figure slowly leaning his way up the slope, Isaac Deutscher on Trotsky under his arm.
Similar(49)
Even love-in-a-fog, love-in-a-cloud,.
By Babette Deutsch The New Yorker, March 12 , 1932P. 25 Even love-in-a-fog, love-in-a-cloud, View Article By Rivka Galchen By Malcolm Gladwell By Ceridwen Dovey By David Remnick.
Late in the evening, a fog rolls in, the smoker working overtime.
A fog hung in the nearly 60-degree air.
There was a fog bank in the distance.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com