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The phrase "a town full of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a town that has a large quantity of a particular thing or characteristic.
Example: "It was a town full of vibrant colors and lively music during the festival."
Alternatives: "a town brimming with" or "a town packed with".
Exact(60)
"A town full of drunks," she notes.
Hebden Bridge is a town full of independent shops.
Odessa was a town full of theatre, she added.
"It is depressing to go there, it's like a town full of ghosts, divided, security everywhere".
There have always been working-class Tories, I've lived in a town full of them.
Just a town full of young people waiting for their world to change.
"The story begins in River Heights, a town full of delightful white people.
"I mean, this is a town full of people who like to leak information.
It's a town full of satellite trucks, Italian news crews, and Financial Times journalists.
Now, he said, having a town full of tourists is "an every-weekend occurrence.
He's a one-hat man in a town full of headgear.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com