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Discover LudwigThe phrase "corset of" is grammatically correct and is commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to describe the material or design of a corset. Example: She wore a beautiful corset of black lace and silk to the masquerade ball.
Exact(32)
But how do you fit your brain into the tight corset of your new home?
Without the corset of those twin half-hours my schedule now flops like a writer's midriff.
On Friday night, he wore a corset of oilskin Lycra and a pink shoulder tassel, saying he felt "very diva".
Mr. Woodvine's Philip is clearly what Carlos could become after a few decades in the corset of absolute power.
But he had definitively swapped the moral corset of Catholic rural Spain for personal and artistic freedom.
Bees also In Crane, Strange and mechanical, mud wasps, A corset of wires, The buzz Of a tiny iron machine, Thunderstorm coming On a dark afternoon.
Similar(28)
He crafted lampshades and masks out of human faces, a belt out of nipples, bowls out of skulls and a corset out of a female torso.
Victoria Beckham had loosened up her signature dresses, from her own full, girlish skirt to the draped shapes that literally took the corset out of her vision.
Subsequent corsets of the 19th century were shaped like an hourglass and were reinforced with whalebone and metal.
We need liberation from the stays and corsets of costume dramas, from mutually assured seduction by Napoleon-era booty calls.
The Guardian's Stuart Jeffries also considered it was "too English" and argued that "we need liberation from the stays and corsets of costume dramas".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com