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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a trick with a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a clever or deceptive action involving something specific, often in a playful or informal context.
Example: "He performed a trick with a deck of cards that left everyone amazed."
Alternatives: "a stunt involving a" or "a ruse with a".
Exact(8)
That's quite a trick, with a card so long expired.
But it's a trick with a shelf life.
Now the play focused on the following point: Would West score a trick with a losing trump?
"Shan's Lucky Knife" (1960), based on a Burmese folk tale, was about a boy besting his tormentor by pulling a trick with a knife.
At Sydney festival, British performer Rob Drummond's Bullet Catch – a participatory magic show about a trick with a notorious fatality rate – was quiet, disquieting and profoundly moving.
The unbearable difference, of course, is that while the minotaur can be slain, Lucinda's cancer can't: The first was dispatched by a trick with a ball of string the second cannot be reached by medical science.
Similar(52)
Advance ticket sales for Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience are running high and Disney's publicity machine hasn't missed a trick with an aggressive campaign that must be driving parents across the nation crazy.
A Trick With Treats I just started a job I love.
And it is through the house that Tyler plays a trick with time in a bittersweet shift back into Abby's youth and the house's early days.
Is it a trick with mirrors?
Then he could lead the diamond six, throw a club, and score a trick with the club king, making his game by fine play.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com