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The phrase "a tide of a" is not correct and does not make sense in written English.
It appears to be an incomplete or improperly structured expression that lacks clarity and context.
Example: "There was a tide of change sweeping through the community."
Alternatives: "a wave of" or "a surge of".
Exact(2)
On Bond Street in NoHo, brokers say, condo rates jump substantially, drawing what Mr. Gross described as "a tide of a new demographic moving into the neighborhood".
Hawa left her village on the run and settled with thousands of others at the camp in Kalma, outside Nyala, part of a tide of a million people that the United Nations and others say has been displaced in this vast region of western Sudan.
Similar(58)
A nation confronts a tide of sexual violence.
A tide of 140cm above a reference point by the Salute church is considered "exceptional".
For many parts of the world, a tide of capital would be a blessing.
But there are concerns, particularly if a fund were to see a tide of withdrawals in a short period.
Later, benefiting from a tide of '60s revivalism, it staged a comeback.
Righteousness rained down, a hailstorm of horror on a tide of piety.
Eric Lomax, a British P.O.W., remembers seeing "thin columns of Asians" that soon became a "flood, a tide of unhappy men".
He says that he could do a Victor Hugo, and unleash a tide of novelistic information about Heydrich's birthplace.
It took a tide of evidence to force an apology – who can forget the humblest day of Murdoch's life?
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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