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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a window for a" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are referring to an opportunity or a chance for something to happen or be done.
Example: "The project provided a window for a new approach to solving the problem."
Alternatives: "an opportunity for a" or "a chance for a".
Exact(16)
Their post-fight praise for each other was wholesome enough to leave a window for a repeat.
"It opens a window for a bank like us to capture market share and we're doing just that," he said.
I watched from a window for a long time as the sun elongated their shadows, and they seemed to become part of the landscape.
After the visit, Lourdes stood outside waiting for Jessica to be searched, so she could appear in a window for a final wave goodbye.
Accidentally locked in a bedroom of a friend's apartment in Paris, Bubka was looking out a window for a way to reach an adjoining room, he said.
Such instability continues right through to one of his final works in 2009, a window for a cathedral in Zurich, in which he recreated the classic optical illusion, Rubin's Vase, in which the outline of two faces make a vase.
Similar(43)
That leaves him the remainder of this week as a window for an announcement, or the final two weeks of August.
"With a 'yes' result there is still a window for an agreement to be reached.
Hang them across a window for an interesting glow.
For Faldo, once No. 1 in the world, a golfer has a window for excellence.
A weakening Japanese currency opens a window for international investors to profit on two fronts.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com