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The phrase "a narrow bundle of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small, tightly packed collection of items or materials, often in a physical or metaphorical sense.
Example: "She carried a narrow bundle of sticks to the campsite for the fire."
Alternatives: "a small collection of" or "a tight grouping of".
Exact(2)
A narrow bundle of muscles is preserved running the length of the trunk along its dorsal margin in UWGM 1767.
One unexpected finding in the human is the presence of a narrow bundle of thin serotonergic immunoreactive profiles at lumbar level coursing at the surface of the dorsal horn, just below the meninges.
Similar(58)
This makes a rather long, narrow bundle of fabric.
When a small amount of noise, such as the variability due to sampling imprecision hampering the perfect localization of a local maximum or minimum, is included in a birhythmic system, the bisecting lines appear as two narrow bundles of lines rather than two single lines, e.g. the birhythmic Verhulst system in Figure 8, right.
The individual, narrower bundles of path 2 were tracked successfully using the adaptive tracking method because of their increased mean FA, whereas the lower FA of path 1 was successfully tracked with this algorithm because of its thicker radius allowing for continuation along the tract when the unit random vector was larger.
It is easy to imagine representing a narrow beam of light by a collection of parallel arrows a bundle of rays.
According to the bundle theory, an individual is a bundle of properties.
He is reliant on a narrow circle of narrow thinkers.
A narrow strip of space.
Once a month he received a bundle of newspapers.
A large supply of paper and a bundle of pens.
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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