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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a pit for a" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are describing a specific type of pit or hole intended for a particular purpose.
Example: "They dug a pit for a fire, ensuring it was deep enough to contain the flames safely."
Alternatives: "a hole for a" or "a space for a".
Exact(8)
"We have to dig a pit for a toilet, and when it's full, we dig another.
Watching your father or your grandfather tend a pit for a number of years seems like something that would inspire you to go into, say, insurance sales.
We'll have five or six places that will order pits, and then we may not build a pit for a couple of months.
Even in the pit — which Mr. Renda says is "called a pit for a reason, because it's the pit of hell" — Isabelle seems looked after.
The US version of a barbecue is quite different to ours, it's all about smoking meat in a "pit" for a long time at low temperatures.
One technique, known as a Dakota fire hole, involves digging a pit for a fire and then adding an angled tunnel from the surface that acts as a chimney.
Similar(50)
In character, they will even dig a pit for an outhouse.
There will be an immersive experience with a T Rex, a quest for an escaped dinosaur, a pit for fossil hunting, and an exhibition featuring real dinosaur eggs, teeth, brain and skeleton.
"He sat in a pit for several years.
Rule breakers are lowered into a pit for 36 hours.
Hapalops lacks a stylohyoid process, instead showing a pit for articulation of the stylohyoid bone of the hyoid apparatus.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com