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The phrase "a hughes" is not correct in standard written English.
It may be a misspelling or misinterpretation of a name or term, but without context, it cannot be used appropriately.
Example: "I met a Hughes at the conference who specializes in renewable energy."
Alternatives: "a person named Hughes" or "an individual called Hughes".
Exact(43)
Bennett is more of a Larkin than a Hughes man, finding Hughes' work "a bit Lawrentian" and the man himself, when he met him, "condescending.
Dalitz was awarded a Hughes Medal by the Royal Society in 1975.
One fan went to the trouble of parking a "Hughes Out" banner outside the Britannia Stadium.
Ex-QPR boss Mark Hughes comes in to replace his fellow Welshman, prompting one man to drive around the Potteries in a van sporting a "Hughes out" banner.
A season ticket holder spent Tuesday driving around the Potteries in a van sporting a "Hughes out" banner, a sign that cost him £50 to make.
Incredibly, Hamm pulled a Hughes redux.
Similar(15)
(Irving, shying from the dirty work, gets Suskind to steal a Hughes-related document).
Equally, it takes more than the phrases "black blood" and "biblical, eastbound" to turn a Hughes-style horse poem into a poem "about" war.
Cech, 51, has been a Hughes-funded investigator for more than a decade and currently heads a research team at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
"It's a grand experiment," says molecular biologist Edward Cox, who runs a Hughes-funded summer research program for undergraduates at Princeton University.
Frank Forbes (Alden Ehrenreich) is a Hughes-employed young man with ambitions beyond chauffeuring around would-be starlets.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com