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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a radio set" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a device that receives radio signals and plays audio content.
Example: "I found an old radio set in the attic that still works perfectly."
Alternatives: "a radio receiver" or "a radio device."
Exact(25)
To reach people in villages where electricity runs for only two hours a day, if that, and nobody owns a radio set, Radio Mewat worked with communities to build up listeners' groups and provided each group with its own battery-operated radio set.
Friends emphasized that the Messenger carried neither a radio set nor ping-pong balls.
In those days, even a radio set with twenty tubes tended to fail a lot.
"In 1922," the Salisburys report, "some 60,000 households had a radio set; by 1924, there were more than 3.5 million".
Each car has a radio set to one of nine stations that combine music with goofy advertisements for things like a service to have pets sent by mail.
"A radio set, a pressure cooker, even a Pepsi can be converted into a deadly weapon, which can destroy tanks and armoured vehicles," Mr Afghanyar, who has just turned 24, told The Independent.
Similar(33)
Endothelial cells appear to work like the volume knob on a radio, setting the intensity of the cytokine explosion, although they might interact with other cells to perform the task.
DAB sales continue to represent around a third of all radio set sales".
When I was growing up, my father would go to bed with a transistor radio set to an all-news station.
But the joys of making a small robot or a crystal radio set have long eluded those who can't get past Step 2 in the instruction manual.
Margot was going to build a crystal radio set out of an oatmeal container, with help from her dad.
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