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The phrase "a pieces of" is not correct in English.
The correct form is "a piece of" or "pieces of" depending on the context. You can use "a piece of" when referring to a single item or portion of something, while "pieces of" is used for multiple items or portions.
Example: "Can I have a piece of cake?" or "I found several pieces of broken glass on the floor."
Alternatives: "a portion of" or "some parts of".
Exact(7)
a, Pieces of ochre used experimentally to produce lines on silcrete flakes.
Still, the festival, produced by Historic Hudson Valley, will offer a Pieces of Eight treasure hunt, in which children will use maps to seek chests containing stickers on the manor grounds; completion earns a prize.
This principle rests on several motives, including the following: (a) Pieces of text taken in isolation are typically ambiguous in various ways (in relation to background linguistic possibilities).
There's plenty of strobe light flashing and "boom boom" as the band starts to perform plus tons of silly string and a pieces of clothing flying off the bodies of the two RTC dancers, piece by piece.
The HA is then covered with a pieces of gelfoam soaked with saline and the ear canal is filled with bacitracin/polymyxin ointment.
Duct tape the final layer (optional) Put a pieces of leftover insulant in the middle of the two ends and duct tape it down.
Similar(53)
A piece of bread.
A piece of bone".
A piece of dirt.
A piece of him.
"A piece of paper!
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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