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The phrase "a hood of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to the covering or top part of a vehicle, garment, or other object.
Example: "The car's engine was exposed after the mechanic lifted a hood of the vehicle."
Alternatives: "a cover of" or "a top of".
Exact(16)
Their clean pink faces looked somehow stricken, each inside a hood of violent flame.
Her red hair grew ever upward, a hood of curls that shouted out her freedom.
Tucked into House's belt, also fluttering, was a hood of homespun cloth dyed black.
We were also working our way through a mash of potato and ham under a hood of melted raclette.
(The April issue's cover features a bikini-clad brunette, perched on a hood of a yellow Mustang, flashing a come-hither smile).
The capper, literally as well as figuratively, is a hood of shaved toasted macadamia nuts, their texture like that of thin sheets of Parmesan.
Similar(43)
"It was just – wow," said West, dressed for the show in a parka with a furry hood, of Lauren's latest collection.
A hood made of birchbark dropped down and blotted out the horse.
There was the cone with vanilla ice cream and a semihard hood of nut-sprinkled chocolate over that.
Irish Poetry By Billy Collins That morning under a pale hood of sky I heard the unambiguous scrape of spackling against the side of our wickered, penitential house.
That advice works for a fume hood of any age.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com