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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a lot of thin" is not correct in written English.
It seems to be a truncated or incorrect expression, possibly intended to convey a quantity of something that is thin, but it lacks clarity.
Example: "There was a lot of thin ice on the lake this winter."
Alternatives: "a great deal of thin" or "many thin items".
Exact(7)
So year after year, there is a lot of thin, watery Burgundy around.
"I think five years from now you will see a lot of thin computing in businesses".
A lot of thin zinfandels were made in 1997, but in fact, some were quite good.
A feisty thing when she was young, Ringer these days has been putting in a lot of thin performances.
"We think there is a lot of thin ice up there, but there's little data to validate [that]," says Ron Lindsay of the University of Washington, Seattle.
There was a lot of thin and tons of sickness.
Similar(50)
And you know what happens when WND gets criticized: a lot of thin-skinned whining and nasty pot shots in return.
The thicker and more hair you have will require a lot of thinning and texturizing, otherwise you'll end up looking like a big bushy mess.
"There was a lot of very thin data that was purported to be robust," Robin recalled in an interview last week.
I spent a lot of time thinning small trees, sawing up bigger ones for firewood, splitting and stacking the wood, and using it all to heat our house.
From my first viewing, last Sunday evening, all I gathered was that this was a tale of a lot of very thin-skinned French men with British accents, clad in billowing pantaloons, with epidermis that required a good steam-clean.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com