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The phrase "a millimeter of space" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing measurements or dimensions, particularly in contexts related to physics, engineering, or design.
Example: "The design requires only a millimeter of space between the components to ensure proper functionality."
Alternatives: "a millimeter of room" or "a millimeter of clearance".
Exact(1)
When the 18th-century English novelist Samuel Richardson expounds on the narrative intricacies of his novel "Clarissa," he writes like a nonstop talker, in a pinpoint fine hand, edge to edge on the page and right to the very bottom, using minimal punctuation and wasting not a millimeter of space.
Similar(59)
The core would occupy about one square millimeter of space on a chip made with one of the most commonly used manufacturing technologies.
Every millimeter of space that the SIM takes up is a millimeter that something else can't — shrink that card, and phones get that much thinner.
Don't attempt to fill every square millimeter of space on the user's screen.
It's obvious, however, that Qualcomm's initial target with Centriq is a pure high density cloud data center play, where blade server architectures and processing density per square millimeter of space, and per-Watt of power consumption, are critical.
In March, Vlasov and his colleagues announced they had successfully created a photonic silicon switch so small that 2,000 of them take up just one square millimeter of space.
"I'll fight for a millimeter of a line just to get the right tension".
Remember, if you put a millimeter of oil in the container, subtract a millimeter from your final measurement.
Shoot for 2-3 millimeters of space on each side of the chain.[1].
There should be about 5 millimeters of space between the top of the plastic top of the mine and the head of the nail.
Hewlett-Packard took what would be the obvious design tack: it widened the keyboard to the last available millimeter of horizontal space, right up against the laptop edges.
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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