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The phrase "a scrape" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a minor injury or abrasion on the skin, often caused by scraping against a rough surface.
Example: "After falling off his bike, he had a scrape on his knee that needed cleaning."
Alternatives: "a scratch" or "a bruise".
Exact(57)
I'm getting old, I'll take a scrape.
Hasn't the ewe with scrapie got herself into a scrape?
And boy am I up for a scrape!
"It was a scrape from the word go," said Anderson.
"No one more likely to get you into a scrape; no one you would prefer to be in a scrape with!" might well have been coined for him.
The nest is a scrape or hollow with scant lining, in which four eggs are laid.
His fingernails had become chipped and there was a scrape on his forehead.
Doesn't look to be a serious ailment, more likely a scrape or blister.
Similar(3)
First, these clones were grown to confluence to carry out a scrape-wound migration assay.
Camelliti et al. used immunolabeling and a scrape-loading dye transfer method to demonstrate that fibroblasts and cardiomyocytes are functionally coupled in the rabbit sinoatrial node [ 8].
Instead of sequencing individual colonies, a 'scrape' of colony forming units was taken from the solid medium on which Mtb bacilli had been isolated from sputum.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com