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"A pit of" can be used to describe the contents of a certain area or container, like a "pit of grief" or a "pit of despair". For example: "The darkness of my room seemed to be a pit of sorrow that I could not escape."
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A pit of snakes.
A pit of bottomless despair?
While hanging upside down over a pit of lava.
Brown is in such a pit of unpopularity that his problem is different.
A jangle of alarms and slamming and confusion, and inside it a pit of nothing.
Ernest Borgnine, who plays the Viking leader Ragnar, leaps memorably into a pit of hungry wolves.
You can't claim the higher ground in a pit of quicksand.
And a pit of clay out back that began to resemble a hippo wallowing pool.
We started again, and again the play dropped into a pit of silence.
If you answer incorrectly, you fall into a pit of snakes.
Flanders in the sixteenth century was a pit of violence — secular wars, religious wars, peasant revolts.
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