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The phrase "a series of interchanges" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe multiple exchanges or interactions, often in a context involving communication or transactions.
Example: "The negotiation involved a series of interchanges between the two parties, each trying to reach a mutually beneficial agreement."
Alternatives: "a sequence of exchanges" or "a chain of interactions".
Exact(2)
At issue in the case was a series of interchanges between Lockheed Martin rocket experts and the Chinese about kick motors, which are small rocket motors that are used to lift a satellite into its final orbit.
The trunkline continues traveling to the north through a series of interchanges.
Similar(57)
The short-form quartet is performed almost entirely side by side, facing the audience from a very small area at the front of the stage, mostly in a series of interchanging solos.
To ease the transition, Scottish transport planners, under strict conditions of secrecy, have begun drawing up plans for a series of spiral interchanges at the major border transport nodes.
But all weekend, after a series of intense interchanges between Tokyo and Washington and the arrival of the first American nuclear experts in Japan, officials said they were beginning to get a clearer picture of what went wrong over the past three days.
The sefirot are often gendered (sometimes multi-gendered), and their interaction is often depicted as a series of erotic interchanges.
Their coach, Jan Kozak, opted to play Ondrej Duda – an attacking midfielder – in the nominal centre-forward role and the result was a series of slick buildups and interchanges that pulled an immobile defence apart.
Through this series of interchanges, I-96 curves to the east and then turns back southward after passing through them.
"This highway spur will probably spawn a series of bedroom communities all along these interchanges," said Gary Thornbloom, chairman of the local Moshannon Sierra Club, which is concerned about sprawl.
This dystopian vision doesn't actually exist yet, but comes from the imagination of Austrian photographer Hubert Blanz in a series of images called Roadshow, featuring entwined interchanges that look like spaghetti junctions on steroids.
Proof's opening credits are interchanged with a series of photographs.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com