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The phrase "a table full of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a table that is filled with items, food, or other objects.
Example: "At the family gathering, there was a table full of delicious dishes and desserts."
Alternatives: "a table laden with" or "a table brimming with".
Exact(60)
There's a table full of donations for the occupiers – bread, tea, crisps, piles of butter.
Blossom was singing "Sophisticated Lady," and a table full of swingers started talking.
He sat behind a table full of empty Coke bottles and tin cans.
There's a table full of Horrible Histories books and a shelf of cuddly armoured elephants.
A table full of debris holds a place of honor in the Rev. Raymond Talavera's office.
At Wesleyan, the camera goes around a dining hall, and an offscreen student asks the different, socially stratified tables — a table full of jocks, a table full of hipsters — to talk about student stereotypes.
People pawed through a table full of empty potato-chip bags, looking for a bottle that had something in it.
Joan and Josep admired a table full of nubby local potatoes, and at another stand inspected an ostrich egg.
Nearby, a table full of toffs in pinstripes roared with laughter at someone's quip about the Inland Revenue.
Had I not been so stunned by his acceptance, I might have asked for a table full of Pakistani treats.
Feeling flustered, you copy your friend's order and end up with a table full of steak and chips.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com