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The phrase "a so common" is not correct in English.
It is incorrect because "so" should not be used with the indefinite article "a" in this context.
Example: "It is a common issue that many people face."
Alternatives: "such a common" or "very common."
Exact(1)
Lichen simplex chronicus, a nonspecific disorder, may be the expression of a so common contact dermatitis but may also reveal another underlying disease.
Similar(57)
Or consider "false comfort," a phrase so common that a Google search turns up more than seventy thousand hits.
Toes dipping below the water line induce a crash so common that barefooters call it a toes-to-nose.
Yup, it's a story so common by now it's a clich.
But now there's a problem so common you'd think it would be fixed now: a time delay on every phrase.
Here we are reporting a not so common manifestation of NTM which presented as multiple abdominal abscesses in a middle aged female probably secondary to surgical site infection, however she responded dramatically to the designed treatment.
Of course, it is unlikely that a statement so common place would make the "Times".
She herself has swollen lymph nodes removed, a surgery so common near the Hanford.
This perch precluded a basement, so common areas like the gym and laundry room are on the second floor.
There was a section so common in big name CES tech presentations that it was almost comical.
It can also network with DLNA software and has HDMI 1.3, a feature so common nowadays (Xbox 360 Elite notwithstanding) it's almost trivial to mention it.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com