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The phrase "a tiny window at" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small opening or view in a specific location or context.
Example: "She peered through a tiny window at the bustling street below."
Alternatives: "a small opening at" or "a narrow view at".
Exact(1)
So what can be done to help with immersion when you're looking through a tiny window at content that isn't where your eye would naturally expect to see it?
Similar(59)
You order your sandwich at a tiny window and eat it at a plastic table, right on the street.
It's so bloody uncreative!" After dinner, almost everyone huddled around a tiny window to share all manner of cigarettes, although smoking is strictly forbidden at Shoreditch House.
And I only saw it in a tiny window on an Apple Mac, in a corner of Curtis's tape-strewn "lair" at BBC Television Centre.
At Manappuram's first village branch, an appraiser sat in an enclosed wooden cubicle with a tiny window.
A plastic curtain hung limply over a tiny window.
A tiny window in the far wall of the room let in some sunlight.
He will call to Mr. Cruz through a tiny window in the thick metal door.
The FAO says there is a "tiny window of opportunity to prevent massive deaths and destitution".
A thin line of light was arriving through a tiny window covered by plastic.
The price of grain from about 2002-2008 – a tiny window – tripled.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com