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The phrase "box of nails" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a container or package filled with nails, often used for construction or household tasks. Example: "I needed to hang a picture on the wall, so I grabbed a box of nails from the garage."
Exact(13)
The 30-pound box of nails isn't long for our world".
"Some days you get really disgusted because you've got to drive 100 miles just to get a box of nails".
With thread and a box of nails Ry Rocklen transforms an abandoned box spring into a bejeweled thing, iridescent if the light is right.
"Some days you get really disgusted because you've got to drive 100 miles just to get a box of nails," said Mr. Brunet, 48.
They were shown a picture of several objects – a candle, a box of nails and pack of matches – placed on a table next to a wall.
The lack of ease in her life made her fierce and funny; she hammers home her hard-won sentences like a box of nails.
Similar(47)
Caroline, 46, pulls out a box of nail polish and shows me the colour she is wearing.
"I want either fuchsia or orange to match my dress," a woman in her 50s said as she rummaged through a box of nail polish in an upscale beauty salon in Damascus.
Rita Dove wrote about a box of nail polish.
I collected all this old stationery and staplers and erasers that were so beautifully packaged, and these great boxes of nails and screws and strange farm implements".
Nortui, who runs a hardware shop whose shelves are neatly stacked with boxes of nails and tins of paint, believes some of the progress can be ascribed to the MDGs.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com