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The phrase "a tiny margin for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a small allowance or leeway in a particular situation, often in contexts like risk, error, or decision-making.
Example: "In this project, we have a tiny margin for error, so we must ensure every detail is perfect."
Alternatives: "a narrow margin for" or "a small allowance for".
Exact(1)
That money could have come in handy as Stearns lost by only 800 votes in Tuesday night's primary, a tiny margin for a congressional race.
Similar(59)
It has been voting republican for 9 straight elections since 1980, except that they voted blue once in 2008 for Obama (who won only by a tiny margin of 0.4%), but then voted red again in 2012 against Obama.
I strongly suspect that enough people voted for him to wipe out Clinton's minuscule pop-vote margin, maybe even replace it with a tiny margin of his own.
They survived financially in a tiny margin of a still affluent society that doesn't exist today.
The branded innovators are able to sell new drugs only for ingredient cost plus a tiny margin, with no contribution to the R&D effort that birthed those drugs.
"It's past it by a tiny margin.
And that is what has finally happened, if only by a tiny margin.
Ed won by a tiny margin, 1.3%, and thanks to the union vote.
"This race will be decided by a tiny margin," Mr. Himes said.
This is Pick Of The Week runner up by a tiny margin.
Mr. Peres saw his lead wiped out, and then lost the election by a tiny margin.
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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