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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a quart of" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to specify a quantity of liquid, particularly in cooking or when measuring ingredients.
Example: "I need a quart of milk for this recipe."
Alternatives: "a liter of" or "a gallon of".
Exact(60)
This needs a quart of that shit".
We added a quart of oil, expensive at $10.25.
The trainer thought a quart of rye might help.
My housekeeper Carole gave me a quart of roadkill bear stew.
It's thriftier, too, since you end up using a cup rather than a quart of oil.
A quart of water over induction boiled in 4 minutes 49 seconds.
A man in Pleasantville fixes himself up with a quart of goat's milk a week.
Drinking a quart of ale in one go takes a certain amount of skill.
Each consumed a quart of flavanol-rich sweetened cocoa every day for four to six days.
Hey, swigging from a quart of beer, I was their kind of athlete.
In the 1920's, a quart of ice cream yielded a dozen cones.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com