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The phrase "a tiny gap in" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small opening or space in something, often in a physical or metaphorical context.
Example: "There was a tiny gap in the fence that allowed the rabbit to escape into the garden."
Alternatives: "a small opening in" or "a slight breach in".
Exact(9)
But there's still a tiny gap in the band.
Through a tiny gap in the curtains, I peer at the street.
'They had opened a tiny gap in the windows at the top, but that was having no effect.
And he was also brave: his classic move was to drive for a tiny gap in the field.Mr Antley won 3,500 races, including two Kentucky Derbies.
Surgeons operated on Elouise Simpson at only 25 weeks' gestation to repair a tiny gap in her lower spine and protect the spinal cord from damage.
Some are caught by Macedonian police or military and forced back to Greece through a tiny gap in the razor-wire border fence in aggressive operations known to the camp's residents as "pushbacks".
Similar(51)
It consists of a pair of thin, flat, metal electrodes with a tiny gap sandwiched in between.
The potential of this structure lays in the high light confinement achievable in a tiny gap of low refractive index.
Table 1 Conversation analysis transcription symbols Symbol Meaning = No gap between two utterances; latching (0.0) Timed interval (pause) in 1/10 of a second A tiny gap Word Stress : Sound strech :: Prolongation of sound ?
Can the two shells have a tiny gap between them, just enough to, say, slide a knife in and jimmy them open?
Michelangelo leaves a tiny gap between them.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com