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The phrase "a year like that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a specific year that had notable characteristics or events, often in a comparative context.
Example: "After experiencing a year like that, I realized how much I had grown and changed."
Alternatives: "such a year" or "a year of that nature".
Exact(11)
Tony Parkes [the club's goalkeeping coach] told me Tottenham have a year like that and it's another 12 years before you see them again.
It's hard to know where to go after a year like that.
"Last year was just a year like that," Allen said.
Some lacrosse programs would consider a year like that successful, but not Coach Charley Toomey and the Greyhounds.
"When you have a year like that, it just makes you feel that much better going forward," Benson said in an interview last week.
I mean, with a year like that — and I didn't even mention how all the radiation from Korean War II was successfully limited to just the Northern and Eastern Hemispheres!
Similar(47)
He's making a huge effort every day, acquiring 40+ companies a year, something like that.
A year! Just like that.
JS: I'm not San Francisco bubble crazy, but I'm reasonably active, funding two or three companies a year, something like that.
Alan Pardew "When you are in a transition year like that, I have a lot of sympathy for him.
We spent the next year like that.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com