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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a rock from a" is grammatically correct but incomplete in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are referring to a specific rock that originates from a particular place or source.
Example: "He picked up a rock from a nearby riverbed to skip across the water."
Alternatives: "a stone from a" or "a boulder from a".
Exact(12)
The company is replicating a rock from a giant cue-ball formation called Rock City.
This is a rock from a fossil redbed.
If you take away a rock from a pile of rocks you haven't changed much.
Original ending: The destruction of the island is initiated when Desmond is lowered into a glowing cave to pull a rock from a golden pool, causing it to turn red.
He came right at the Jazz with the force of a rock from a slingshot, diving inside for four straight layups in the first 7 minutes of the game.
As an opening moment in the evening, Latrell Sprewell took a look at the Knicks' demons before him and hurled himself through the turf of Tim Duncan and David Robinson like a rock from a slingshot.
Similar(48)
Someone offered me a rock from an Austrian spa.
AS EVERY schoolchild knows, the dinosaurs were wiped out in an instant, when a rock from outer space hit what is now southern Mexico.
As a result, a hunt has started among Egyptology collections in Europe, including a Rouen museum which has a rock from the Great Pyramid in its reserve.
So a rock from Mars would have a markedly different ratio of O-17 compared with O-16 than, say, a piece of an asteroid or a rock from Earth.
We will follow a pseudo "life" of a rock from igneous to sedimentary to metamorphic and beyond.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com