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The phrase "a junk of" is not correct in standard written English.
The correct expression would typically be "a chunk of" when referring to a piece or portion of something.
Example: "I found a chunk of ice in the freezer."
Alternatives: "a piece of" or "a bit of".
Exact(2)
There was a junk of heavy oak furniture, monstrosities too big for modern apartments, boxes of soiled napery and bric-a-brac.
This chair was found in a junk of a second-hand furniture shop.
Similar(57)
An unreflective application of that approach thus puts courts at risk of relying upon a "junk science" of the nature of scientific knowledge.
An unreflective application of the Daubert criteria thus puts courts at risk of producing and applying a "junk science" of the nature of scientific knowledge.
What's new is not the collapse of a junk class of securities.
Nearby is a junk pile of scrap metal and trash.
There was a junk heap of small items: pennies, beer cans and unopened bills.
Mrs. Rich said their house is "a junk pit of geocaching prizes".
As a result, in attempting to diligently implement Daubert, federal judges have effectively fallen back on a "junk science" of how science works.
PLYWOOD OFFICE of a junk yard in the desert.
A discarded china cabinet was found from the junk of a second-hand furniture shop in Newcastle.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com