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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tiny force" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small amount of power or influence in various contexts, such as physics or metaphorical situations.
Example: "Despite its size, the tiny force exerted by the magnet was enough to lift the paperclip off the table."
Alternatives: "a small force" or "a minimal force".
Exact(10)
Yet, for a vast area home to 450m people, this is still a tiny force.
He landed with a tiny force of about a dozen men on the west coast of Scotland in July 1745 and raised the Highlands in revolt.
To detect such a tiny force, the NIST team confined about 60 ultra-cold beryllium ions in a device called a Penning trap, which uses magnetic and electric fields to imprison charged particles.
"Militant Islamism is only a tiny force in Europe", wrote the conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, "yet it is dangerous, because many societies on this continent have elevated their defencelessness into a virtue".
From a tiny force of nearly 9,000 seamen in 1861, the Union navy increased by war's end to about 59,000 sailors, whereas naval appropriations per year leaped from approximately $12 million to perhaps $123 million.
In the south, meanwhile, civil war left the weakened Inca realm vulnerable to Francisco Pizarro, who arrived in Peru in 1531 with a tiny force of 180 men and ended up capturing the Inca emperor.
Similar(50)
"You would expect a small tiny force to build up over time, giving you a bigger offset to detect whether the dark matter interacts - just slightly.
On Facebook, many of my Army friends have voiced their frustration over the Iraqi Army – once trained by us – after they abandoned their positions in the face of a relatively tiny force.
Even though this is a very tiny force, it is perpetual, and over days, weeks, and months, this snail-paced acceleration results in the achievement of velocities large enough to overtake and pass the voyagers and pioneers that are now speeding away through the outer reaches of our solar system.
Unlike capacitive touch, which is the technology built into most smartphones and tablets and simply detects the presence of conductive objects like your fingers and special styluses, Sensel's Morph relies on a grid of 20,000 tiny force sensors that can also figure out how hard all kinds of objects fingers, brushes, pens are pressing on it.
It doesn't stop them, and by the end he is a grudging admirer of Mouna Rudo, whose tiny force stands up to the general's well-equipped army of thousands.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com