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The phrase "a neat little stack" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a tidy or organized arrangement of items, often implying a sense of order or compactness.
Example: "After organizing my papers, I was pleased to see a neat little stack on my desk."
Alternatives: "a tidy little pile" or "an orderly little stack".
Exact(1)
Retracted, it piles itself into a neat little stack behind the rear seats, preserving the 7.1 cubic feet of trunk space.
Similar(59)
With just a tap, neat little stacks of thumbnails bloom into a full screen of images, which you can shuffle through by simply swiping your finger.
A neat little Log Stack was no problem, except that you have to run over it with your hands behind your head.
"They were in very neat little stacks — it was Germany, after all," he said with a laugh.
Two years had passed since I'd read the Alexander books — paperback copies of which were now stacked, along with Renault's other books, into a neat little ziggurat in my bedroom cabinet — and there were things I wondered about, specific things, that weren't described in the Mary Renault books.
Nothing's a neat little oval.
A neat little business, you might conclude.
Rita: Athens is a neat little town.
Obviously, nothing is a neat little oval in the brain.
Expert's view: "A neat little Grecian building.
Grief is not a neat little package, she said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com