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The phrase "bollocks of" is not a standard or commonly used part of a sentence in written English.
It is possible that someone may use it in spoken language, but it is considered slang and may not be appropriate in formal or professional contexts. It is derived from the British English term "bollocks," which means nonsense or rubbish. Example: "The entire project is based on the bollocks of a faulty hypothesis."
Exact(12)
10.23pm BST Kaymer is busy making a bollocks of 8.
Absolute bollocks, of course, but why expect anything else?
An ersatz tribute to Colin Montgomerie making a proper bollocks of it from prime position down the 72nd at Winged Foot.
Foxy joined the SAS because he disliked bullies, craved autonomy and was "fed up with the pageantry and bollocks of the regular military".
Ironically, given that the scene was a reaction against the "faceless techno bollocks" of 1990s rave, the most memorable electroclash anthems were stirring, majestic instrumentals by faceless producers like Vitalic and Legowelt.
On 18, McDowell makes a royal bollocks of it, sending his ball whistling straight across and through the green from the bunker on the right, then fluffing the putt from the fringe on the other side.
Similar(48)
They are an ironclad team with a clear hierarchy whose jobs are to cheerfully welcome (Tom), shout the bollocks off of (Eden) and occasionally make "u horny?" eyebrows at (Nadia) our various celebrities (*2).
We've all, one way or another, popped our dick and bollocks out of our trousers.
You'd think that Izzard's slipperiness and his gift for wordplay and nonsense humor ("bollocks on top of more bollocks," he has called his style) make him a natural for the role of a con man, like the one he plays in the new FX show "The Riches," about a family of Travellers — Gypsy-like communities — who pull off a theft of huge proportions.
This is, for obvious historical and structural reasons, a load of bollocks – but of course we welcome Emma Litole-Pengelly thethe fight against systemic oppression all the same.
Even Mr Jensen's apocalyptic bollocking of Peter Finch ("Valhalla, Mr Beale, Please sit down …") seems faintly risible now.
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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