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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a pool of dots" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a collection or grouping of dots, often in a visual or metaphorical context.
Example: "The artist created a mesmerizing image that resembled a pool of dots, each one contributing to the overall effect."
Alternatives: "a cluster of dots" or "a mass of dots".
Exact(1)
My memory, however, is more like a pool of dots.
Similar(59)
At dessert time, an adorable meringue mushroom arrives standing upright in a pool of pistachio sauce dotted with chocolate pearls.
Next up, fine ribbons of celeriac with muscat grapes and crushed hazelnuts in a pool of celeriac bouillon with dots of lemon oil was decidedly autumnal and vaguely Chaucerian.
Made from several varieties of local fruit set in a pool of kelp oil and dotted with tiny rounds of sancho pepper, the citrus dish's bright juiciness and deep savouriness were delicious enough to encourage bowl-licking.
She's enveloped in a saffron parachute dress covered in seafoam green polka dots; a pool of yellow light catches the bejeweled hand she places on her hip, and she towers over the audience in red patent leather platform pumps.
They rest in a pool of sticky reduced pan juices, dotted with cubes of roast carrot that, for the foreseeable future, will define carrotness in my taste memory.
Whereas local contour information was not provided by a given random subset, one could argue that the contour-filtering process simply waited for a number of the subsets to be delivered, after which the contour attributes could be extracted from the aggregate pool of dots.
Yes, we will take every dot-com ad that can pay for it, but our business plan is not built on soaking up an ever-growing pool of dot-com advertising".
In particular, within all onyms of onyms, constituting a pool of terms likely related to a given word, dot product is a powerful predictor of semantic content (Figure 8 and Table 2).
Seventy potential BAN specific sequences were obtained after SSH of the BAN genome, with a pool of closely related strain genomes and subsequent differential screening by dot blot hybridisation.
But to really make a splash in the crowded pool of dot-coms, you need one more thing a dynamite chief executive.
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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