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Discover Ludwig"a huge buzz" is a perfectly acceptable phrase in written English
It is often used to describe a sense of excitement or anticipation, usually about an important or significant event. For example: "There was a huge buzz surrounding the upcoming Olympics."
Exact(54)
So by contrast, obviously AI's a huge buzz word at the moment and is hugely popular, both in academia and industry, but still a lot of the that we find around us all or that's labeled AI is of this kind of what I would call narrow AI.
'There is a huge buzz around the Olympic village.
The whole thing has ramped up and it's a huge buzz to be part of it.
It's infuriating I know, but I do get a huge buzz out of the manic side.
It had a mixed reaction, but it created a huge buzz.
"It's been a huge buzz since Coach Cutcliffe got here," quarterback Thaddeus Lewis said.
Similar(6)
Across the road, there was a huge buzz-cut field, with cows at random intervals.
The conference -- this year's is the 31st -- is a huge, buzzing mainframe of information on jazz of all kinds; there was nothing like it before.
If you can't decide what species they are, look for the nest, it's a huge, buzzing thing tucked up next to a gutter or hanging on a fence post.
Just opening the Instant Messenger window gave me a huge nostalgia buzz.
Beyonce released BEYONCE unexpectedly on Friday 13 December, creating a huge online buzz around her album without a single run-up marketing campaign.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com