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The phrase "a tiny crack" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a small fissure or opening in a surface, often in contexts related to physical objects or structures.
Example: "After the earthquake, we noticed a tiny crack in the wall that hadn't been there before."
Alternatives: "a small fissure" or "a little gap."
Exact(33)
A tiny crack appeared".
Nearly formless, it can slip like a mouse through a tiny crack.
There was a tiny crack in the glass, and a line of mist at the crack, under the glass.
Communication with the dead is a risky business, principally because once the door to the beyond opens a tiny crack, all kinds of maudlin nonsense come rushing in.
Please save the world". Bland held his breath for 20 minutes and swam through a tiny crack in the steel that barricaded the Caspian Sea dock.
Engineers have found a tiny crack in a fuel line of the space shuttle Columbia very similar to those previously discovered in two other shuttles, NASA said today.
Similar(27)
These tattered specimens provide us with a tiny, cracked peephole through which we attempt to view the past.
Shapiro said that could "open the door a tiny, tiny crack" for trade talks.
We didn't turn her around completely, but we opened her up a little tiny crack".
The trimmer snaps on, the noise making a million tiny cracks in the afternoon.
― Stella G. Maddox, author of A Thousand Tiny Cracks.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com