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The phrase "a turnout for" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to the number of people who attend an event or participate in a gathering.
Example: "The concert had a great turnout for a Wednesday night, with hundreds of fans showing up to see their favorite band."
Alternatives: "an attendance of" or "a participation rate of".
Exact(7)
Or Evite just isn't driving a turnout for your dinner party.
Quite a turnout for the 270-ish jobs created so far.
I've never seen such a turnout for a reading, but then again this wasn't just any old reading, but a new-media reading.
In 1959, when it opened, there was a feeling that the leisurely, Monet-like movie had pulled into a turnout for a picnic, with story prudes protesting: "Why, this is no longer a good old, suspenseful western about a sheriff and his prisoners!
Past milepost 6 is a turnout for the Byron Glacier and Portage Lake.
What a turnout for last night's football game in Miami against the Colts.
Similar(53)
A crowd of about 60,000 – a big turnout for a midweek rally – gathered on Independence Square, where a minute of silence was held to remember the victims.
If 20 show up, he said, it'll be a good turnout for a caucus in an incumbent year.
It was, however, a high turnout for a byelection.
That's a good turnout for a Schumer event.
There was a surprising turnout for a third, lesser-known candidate, Aaron Holmes.
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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