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The phrase "a trick at" is not commonly used in written English and may not convey a clear meaning without additional context.
It could potentially be used in contexts related to performing a trick or skill at a specific location or event.
Example: "He pulled off a trick at the magic show that left the audience in awe."
Alternatives: "a stunt at" or "a feat at".
Exact(15)
Or if it is a trick at all.
It's a trick at least as old as Beethoven.
A common defensive card-play error is winning a trick at the wrong moment, usually prematurely.
It came to me during this hair-raising trip that China had missed a trick at the Beijing Olympics.
Burke, while trying to land a trick at the base of the halfpipe, crashed and struck her head, rupturing her vertebral artery.
"It's actually really easy," Mr. Gambrel said, speaking of how he does what he does, as though it were a trick at a party.
Similar(45)
In Jackson's political interning experience, he also witnessed Conservative interns doing the ol' pretend-to-be-a-protester trick at a Liberal convention.
(It was like his predictions-in-a-box trick at the Oscars, but much funnier).
That's not a trick question, at least not to archaeologists studying a royal burial site in northern Greece.
Its long-term memory allows it to perform a trick after at least three months of non-performance.
"Even if it was for an occasional trick at a party".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com