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The phrase "a splash that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe an impactful or noticeable action or event, often in a metaphorical sense.
Example: "The artist made a splash that captivated the audience during the gallery opening."
Alternatives: "a burst that" or "an impact that".
Exact(19)
She turned on the pool lights and then leaped into the water with a splash that hit Cline like a tsunami.
No one who had the privilege of joining them in France could forget their laughter-filled hospitality – or the sight of Andrew leaping from a high wall with a splash that threatened to empty the swimming pool.
The result, in 1988, was Fisherman's Blues The album didn't make a splash that year; perhaps the arbiters of our taste had their radar pointed elsewhere - the emerging house scene, the rumblings from Manchester, (God help us) acid jazz.
The aim should be for new players to grow local economies that benefit every stakeholder – not arrive with a splash that destabilizes the communities we need to build.
Meanwhile at the treble end of the business the fine details are articulated with utter precisions which means you can hear guitar strings being strummed by a plectrum while cymbals are making a splash that's neither sibilant nor muffled.
Click above to join us in making a splash that can't be ignored by the media, Congress, or President Trump.
Similar(41)
If the goal of the company is to get a 1 day pop to make a PR splash, that is a completely different strategy.
So, if WWE is looking to make a big splash that could really reinvigorate SmackDown, the return of Mysterio could do just that, perhaps as soon as at Hell in a Cell.
Still, an internal debate about timing continues at Fox: Is it better to accelerate the marketing plan with an immediate splash that brands "Neighborhood Watch" as an absurdist comedy about interplanetary threat?
It skidded into the pool with a loud pop, creating a killer whalelike splash that sent water spilling over the concrete toward dozens of onlookers.
I look as if someone had dumped grape juice on me, a big, serious splash that turns into droplets only when it reaches my neck.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com