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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a split focus" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation where attention or concentration is divided between multiple tasks or subjects.
Example: "In today's fast-paced work environment, many employees struggle with a split focus, trying to juggle multiple projects at once."
Alternatives: "divided attention" or "scattered focus".
Exact(6)
Video affords Mr. Gal a split focus.
The formula that emerged was a small-form, highly automated supermarket, with a split focus on low-cost traditional grocery items and locally sourced, healthy and natural foods.
HeardAbout?, based in San Francisco, went online earlier this year with a split focus: reviews of restaurant dishes from well-known food writers and chefs, combined with special discounts.
Toying With New Technology What grabbed his attention was the first use in the film of a dioptric lens with a split focus, a toy that was relatively new when the movie was made and that Pakula used to spectacular effect in the film.
Yahoo does seem to have a bit of a split focus, considering how much effort it's putting into mobile products and services, but video is probably part of the larger picture.
"It's difficult to have a split focus when you're doing something that difficult".
Similar(53)
The narrative maintains an elegiac tone while establishing a split-focus perspective on two families, one white and one black, who stay within the boundaries of their adjacent neighborhoods until one summer night in 1972 when three white boys take a joyride to the black side of town.
The Tokyo String Quartet is offering a series with an interestingly split focus at the 92nd Street Y this season.
The group was at its most magical in the slow movement of Opus 127, a dark-hued Adagio that in this reading seemed to have an unusual split focus.
It's a mark of his magnetism that, as a film of Beirut floods a screen at the back of the stage, this split focus creates a thrilling sense of cross-cultural togetherness.
Gros writes a lot about this split focus and, following Karl Gottlob Schelle's 1802 essay The Art of Walking, compares walking with sitting.
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