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The phrase "arrowhead of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe the pointed end or tip of an arrow, often in a metaphorical or descriptive context.
Example: "The arrowhead of the spear glinted in the sunlight, drawing attention to its sharpness."
Alternatives: "tip of" or "point of".
Exact(28)
The arrowhead of Schlosser's polemic was a sensational revelation about "faecal matter" in the beef patties.
At that point Rashford and Sterling moved into slightly wider positions, with Rooney at the arrowhead of attack, and Hodgson noted afterwards that the general play improved.
The besieged city is thought likely to fall to Syrian forces and Hezbollah, which has been at the arrowhead of recent advances.
At 6.45am, under a sky already bright blue, the fire engine moved off, preceded by an arrowhead of 17 police outriders in white leathers who led the motorcade on the 30-kilometre journey into the city.
To the French mind, Disney represents the arrowhead of American cultural assault, and if America were to return the favor it would need to mount a major retrospective of soft, unpasteurized French cheese at the Metropolitan Museum.
Zhang Ziyi, Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro are all outstanding - perhaps especially Lau for whom this film is another major career advance - and their humanly convincing characters give the film's extravagant fantasy an arrowhead of emotional power.
Similar(32)
The largest look like the arrowheads of giants, and can sell for thousands of dollars.
Remarkably refined techniques for fastening arrowheads of flint and obsidian to shafts were well in hand long before recorded history.
These include flat oblong axes, chisels, knives, spears, arrowheads (of a kind that was evidently exported to neighbouring hunting tribes), small saws, and razors.
Arrowheads of flint and obsidian, knapped to remarkably uniform standards, survived well into the Bronze Age, and bronze arrowheads were used long after the adoption of iron for virtually every other military cutting or piercing implement.
c The lipomatous content (arrowheads) of the NDSC appears hyperintense on T1 (upper image part) and hypointense on fat-saturated contrast-enhanced T1 (lower image part), respectively.
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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