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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tiny burst of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small, sudden release or occurrence of something, often in a figurative sense.
Example: "As the fireworks lit up the sky, there was a tiny burst of color that took everyone's breath away."
Alternatives: "a small flash of" or "a brief surge of".
Exact(9)
Once they observed that an axon had made a connection, they stimulated the neuron with a tiny burst of blue light and instantly observed a muscle contraction.
But Khaled's obsession with making his fans laugh, and providing them with a tiny burst of adrenaline to get over the mid-day hump, is irresistible.
In its wake, the jet leaves a cavitation bubble that, when it collapses, produces a tiny burst of energy with temperatures reaching as hot as the surface of the sun.
He quickly challenges Janet Yellen on the "extreme levels" of Fed's quantitative easing programme, citing claims that the huge bond-buying programme has only generated a tiny burst of growth.
Winner Sunburst lichen - Halina Pasiecznik Runner-up Boggart's blanket - Trancegemini Judges' comments: This lichen lives in peaty areas and looks just like a tiny burst of sunshine against the dark soil, so the name fits it perfectly.
"Is there that much you regret?" Mustian refuses to flinch when describing the grim realities that resurface in Conn's thoughts of the past: "And then comes the horseman... directing his steed's hoof squarely onto the infant's skull, crushing it in a tiny burst of liquid, a smallish squish of sound".
Similar(51)
Did the man in the sunglasses and the sweatshirt talking to an older woman, who, I presume, is his mother, even notice the tiny burst of light above my right eye, the picture of himself, soon to be on the hard drive of my laptop, reflected back at him?
The breakthroughs had come at SLAC in experiments where electrons and their antimatter counterparts, positrons, annihilated to produce tiny burst of energy.
So while I do appreciate that Congress is actually doing a few things this week, I cannot in any way say I'm impressed by this tiny burst of energy.
Keeping it short and making it count -- in an age defined by tiny bursts of information, that's the big job.
A scattering of peas, fiddlehead ferns, baby carrots and, yes, asparagus tips -- all billed as "tiny bursts of spring" -- enlivens a plate-filling raviolo with grilled rabbit and langoustines.
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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