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The phrase "atomic as a" is not complete and lacks context, making it difficult to assess its correctness and usability in written English.
It could be used in a context where you are comparing something to the concept of atomicity, but it needs additional information to clarify the comparison.
Example: "Her focus was atomic as a laser beam, cutting through distractions effortlessly."
Alternatives: "small as an atom" or "fundamental as an atom."
Exact(3)
At the time, Fox positioned Atomic as a marketing venture whose purpose was to attract audiences that were not as influenced by mainstream television advertising.
The cause of the "Afterworld" calamity seems to be atomic, as a Japanese sage tells the hypersquare ad guy, Russell Shoemaker, that the phenomena in burnt-out New York remind him of Hiroshima.
Even though I know the notion of the bikini as a sexual object is about as atomic as a Blondie tribute act these days, it remains stuffed in the back of my sock drawer until the holidays (and the promise of a foreign beach) draw near.
Similar(57)
Figure 4a depicts the resonant frequency shift of the graphene resonator due to atomic adsorption as a function of atomic mass as well as the amplitude of an actuation force.
After the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, atomic scientists lobbied for the international control of atomic energy as a main function of world federalist government.
In 1945, the first year of the nuclear age, Albert Einstein described atomic energy as a "menace" and added: "Perhaps it is well that it should be.
This representation suggests that C < G and A < T. In the Paired Nucleotide Atomic Number representation [9], the paired nucleotides are assigned with atomic numbers as A, G = 62 and C, T = 42 respectively.
RNAbuilder uses a full atomic model as a rigid template onto which it threads another full atomic molecule which attempts to satisfy both the geometry of the template and the specified tertiary contacts.
Geim had isolated the first two-dimensional material ever discovered: an atom-thick layer of carbon, which appeared, under an atomic microscope, as a flat lattice of hexagons linked in a honeycomb pattern.
But the Doomsday Clock, which Mrs. Langsdorf drew for the June 1947 cover of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists as a way to evoke the potential devastation of nuclear weapons, did not stay in reverse.
Here, we suspect, is the beginning of an almost inevitable development-the atomic bomb as a unit of measurement, like horsepower.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com