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The phrase "at that peak" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a specific high point in time, performance, or achievement.
Example: "The company experienced its highest sales figures at that peak, which significantly boosted its reputation in the market."
Alternatives: "during that high point" or "at that summit".
Exact(18)
"Right now, I'm not at that peak".
Yet they continued, at that peak, for 11 minutes, 22 seconds.
But in retrospect, it'll always be that the beginning of a recession is supposedly at that peak.
At that peak, the CAPE was at 27 — a little higher than it is now, though not extraordinarily lofty.
But even at that peak, Seasonale accounted for what Mr. Gal called a "small segment" of the $1.7 billion annual United States market for oral contraceptives.
I'd rather look at that peak, and know it will always be Black Elk Peak, than have my great-grandpa's name and face on one of those little saint cards".
Similar(42)
Newsweek estimates that, at the peak of that crisis, two hundred and fifty farms closed every hour.
Jonathan Miller, an appraiser and president of Miller Samuel Inc., said that at the peak, sales at the two buildings "fed off each other," driving prices ever higher.
And that at the peak times, 35 messages are sent a second.
Investors who bought at the peak that opening day are now down about 20percentt since then.
Miller estimated that at the peak of the New York luxury apartments trend, 40percentt of buyers were foreign, mainly Chinese.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com