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Discover Ludwig"a hell of a day" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe an exceptionally difficult or unpleasant day. For example: I had a hell of a day at work today - my computer crashed, I was given a huge project with an unrealistically fast deadline, and I couldn't find a place to eat lunch.
Exact(12)
Tomorrow should be a hell of a day.
It was a hell of a day, just one thing after another".
Martin Smith, the millionaire chairman of English National Opera, is going to have a hell of a day.
It had, Corrigan told me, been a hell of a day: 1,000 oysters opened, and they were still going at it.
At 3.22am he tweeted that it had been a "hell of a day" and posted a link to the Public Enemy song Fight the Power.
From Charlie Rose and John Doer first thing in the morning, to David Carr and Eric Hippeau last thing in the afternoon – via the first two rounds of the start-up battlefield, plus the already-infamous Arrington vs Bartz interview – it was a hell of a day.
Similar(48)
I can only assume this assures that Robert Luketic is going to have a hell of a Labor Day weekend celebration party.
The company is having a hell of an IPO day.
"He did a hell of a job that day," Mr. Miller said of Mr. Clarke in an interview on Monday that was suggested by the White House.
Adam Nossiter, when I wrote to him about his coverage of the spread of the Ebola virus, replied, "It is a hell of a paper, every day".
Five million viewers is a hell of a lot for a Tuesday night these days (The Voice, on the hyped prime Saturday slot, pulled in just under 7m).
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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