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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a growing turf" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing an expanding area of influence, territory, or market share, often in relation to competition or development.
Example: "The company is establishing a growing turf in the renewable energy sector, outpacing its competitors."
Alternatives: "an expanding domain" or "a developing territory".
Exact(1)
His departure signals a growing turf war on the Trump campaign between the old guard staffers who have been there since the beginning, and the newer people who have been brought on to "professionalize" the campaign in recent months, the Washington Post's James Hohmann notes.
Similar(59)
Is there a simple way to fix this? A. Though the mighty soybean can do many things, it cannot grow turf.
EBay has a big fixed-pricing business as well as a growing focus on Amazon's turf– books, music and videos.
Police officials and criminologists say there is no single explanation for the increase nationally, but point to disputes that more often end in gun violence and turf battles over a growing, and highly profitable, heroin trade.
Review of these papers reveals that there is a growing interest in investigating the real-world effects of TURFs, both positive and negative.
If it does not move quickly to boost production, Caterpillar risks losing market share to a growing group of global competitors that are edging in on its turf.
The call for a moratorium is part of a growing concern among parents, public health officials and environmentalists about synthetic-turf fields.
M. G. Lord, the author of a memoir, "Astro Turf," on growing up in the aerospace culture in California, suggested that these findings contributed to a growing awareness that our bodies are far more fragile than science fiction writers thought when they concocted wide-ranging colonization scenarios.
Turf grasses are often grown on turf, or sod, farms.
In addition, the Festuca genus contains a number of grass species grown for turf or ornamental purposes such as sheep's fescue (F. ovina L). and red fescue (F. rubra L).
Most widely grown forage, turf and bioenergy species (e.g. tall fescue, perennial ryegrass, switchgrass, alfalfa, white clover) are highly self-incompatible and outcrossing.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com