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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a strong sideshow" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a secondary event or attraction that is particularly impressive or noteworthy, often in the context of a larger main event.
Example: "While the main concert was fantastic, the art installation nearby was a strong sideshow that captivated many attendees."
Alternatives: "a notable attraction" or "an impressive side event".
Exact(1)
For the people who attend these events or watch them on television, there is a strong sideshow element, said James Taylor, the publisher of Shocked and Amazed, a newsletter devoted to sideshows.
Similar(59)
You get a strong sense that the circuses and sideshows gave the socially constrained permission to peak, to release suppressed urges.
So Mr. Sitt announced in a press release last week that he would bring in Mr. Strong's sideshow, John Strong's Shows, and 25 rides, including the Himalaya and the Flying Bobsled.
football in Baton Rouge is a sideshow — an elaborate sideshow people feel passionately about, yes, but a sideshow nonetheless.
What is a circus without a sideshow?
A carny needs a sideshow, too — preferably with scary freaks.
This dispute was a bit of a sideshow.
Compared to them, disruption is a bit of a sideshow.
The Circus, after all, is precisely that: an outmoded sideshow of clowns, strong-men and acrobats, founded on dodgy principles and banging the drum for a war that may not be a real war anyway.
They need a main event, not a sideshow.
A real show, not a sideshow.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com