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The phrase "a slight trickle" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small, gentle flow of liquid or a minimal amount of something, often in a figurative sense.
Example: "After the rain, there was a slight trickle of water running down the street."
Alternatives: "a small stream" or "a gentle flow".
Exact(1)
At 3 a.m., I woke to a slight trickle of perspiration down my breast and felt the dull ache of the swollen mammary as I shifted my sleepy body -- the first signs of a pending period.
Similar(59)
There's just one slight trickle of blood in the entire film.
When on tour his team mates did not ask if it had rained last night, merely "Did Ponny wake during the night?"—legend had it that even the slightest trickle would wake him and have him anguishing over having to bat on the "sticky" in the morning.
He's just trickled a gorgeous 30 footer, with a slight right to left break, into the cup at 14 for birdie.
"Self Made Vol. 2," the label's second compilation, is a slight move away from the maximalism that Mr. Ross has perfected and that has successfully trickled down, in different ways, to protégés like Meek Mill and Gunplay.
A slight?
A slight firm tilt.
A slight pause.
A slight smile rose.
And a slight, crowded smile.
It is not a slight.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com