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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a large jet of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a significant or forceful stream of a substance, such as water, air, or gas.
Example: "The fire hose released a large jet of water to extinguish the flames."
Alternatives: "a powerful stream of" or "a strong burst of".
Exact(1)
The first physician performed an invasive procedure (bronchoscopy) on case-patient 2. The outlet port of the patient's ventilator was later discovered to have malfunctioned during the procedure, exposing the physician to a large jet of exhaled air.
Similar(59)
That's because it flies relatively slowly, and it needs extra airspace when there's a large jet in front of it.
A 57-year-old tourist has died after she stood too close to an airport's runway in the Caribbean and the engine of a large jet blew her into the ground.
His formula: building palaces, apartment complexes and marinas; buying luxury hotels, thousands of cars and dozens of aircraft; and supporting a large, jet-setting retinue of wives, mistresses and 35 children.
And, initially at least, each tower did survive the high-speed impact of a larger jet, a Boeing 767.
Like most comets, Hale-Bopp also releases large jets of easily vaporized material when it approaches the sun.
Using data collected by the CMS experiment at the LHC in 2015-2016, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 38.2 fb -1), reconstructed particles are clustered into two large jets ofb -1ilareconstructedconsistent with four-particlesbstructure.
Rosetta is attempting to target its rendezvous at the start of the inward curve, before our star can warm the 4km-wide body and trigger large jets of gas and dust from its surface.
The movement came after months of conflicts between protesters and police, including authorities targeting activists with tear gas, rubber bullets and large jets of water in below-freezing temperatures.
Though video footage shows law enforcement officers shooting large jets of water directly at the crowd ― using water cannons, activists said, though the sheriff's department said it used fire hoses ― Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier claimed that the water just a "mist".
Newly forming stars send out large jets of gas, even as they pull gas and other matter toward them in the process of their formation, explained Hector Acre, an associate professor at Yale University and the lead author of a new study about Herbig-Haro 46/47 that will be published in the Astrophysical Journal.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com