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The phrase "a large claw of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a specific part of an animal or object that has a claw, emphasizing its size.
Example: "The dinosaur's fossil revealed a large claw of impressive proportions, indicating its predatory nature."
Alternatives: "a big claw of" or "a sizable claw of".
Exact(1)
Large values of these ratios indicate a large claw of small mass that should require relatively little energy to wave.
Similar(59)
The hallux (the first toe of the foot) showed a large claw that was flattened laterally, as seen in "prosauropods".
All you get is pristine melody, harmony, deeply felt emotion and despair, commitment to performance and a large steaming claw tub of endless love.
Sea scorpions are related to horseshoe crabs and had six pairs of legs, a tail, and a pair of large claw-like appendages.
The toes were generally short, blunt, and broad, but some sauropods had a large straight claw on the first digit of the forefoot and the first and second toes of the hind foot.
The waving and vertical movement of the large claw is apparently species specific.
Large claw machines are an unlikely chance.
Dromaeosaurid feet bore a large, recurved claw on the second toe.
You can tell if a hermit crab's shell fits if it can seal the opening of the shell with its large claw and armor leg (back left).
Like many non-avian dinosaurs and unlike any living bird it has a long bony tail, large claws on three fingers of the hand, and teeth in the jaws, and yet it has that most avian of features, large, pinnate feathers, in neat rows, across the arms to form wings.
Rule changes to front wings have reduced downforce but many teams have clawed a large part of it back.
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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