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The phrase "a great pressure" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a significant amount of stress or force applied to something or someone.
Example: "The team felt a great pressure to meet the tight deadlines set by management."
Alternatives: "a significant pressure" or "a heavy pressure".
Exact(17)
Isn't the £1m Orion deal a great pressure on him?
"I felt a great pressure had been lifted off my shoulders," Dallaire said.
We had more speed, skill and ideas, and she played as a great pressure reliever from midfielders.
But, he said, "There's a great pressure in psychiatry, as it moves closer to medicine, to provide quantitative measurements".
Or even with someone like Chris Nolan or David Fincher, there's a great pressure to be excellent and dramatic and intellectual, and those guys are brilliant at it.
Is there a great pressure by this stage of your career to have one of the big prizes under your belt?
Similar(43)
"There is a greater pressure when you are starting, and I kind of love that.
I was in drama school with people who were the only members of their family to pursue acting and they probably felt a greater pressure to succeed or prove their families wrong than I ever did.
At a greater pressure, the ratio would correspond to a reduction in membrane area.
Pipes for these gases usually have a higher velocity at the expense of a greater pressure drop than those for ammonia.
Flow splitting and impingement are found to be beneficial to improve mixing and reaction rate; albeit this imposes a greater pressure drop penalty.
More suggestions(1)
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com