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Discover LudwigThe phrase "countless hundreds" is grammatically correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to emphasize a large or indefinite number of something. Example: The charity organization has helped countless hundreds of families in need over the years.
Exact(6)
Then, pointing away from the royals to the crowd: "Over there, countless hundreds of people watching them watching the view".
Countless hundreds of sukkahs — fragile temporary huts, roofed in branches or reeds — sprout on rooftops and balconies, in front yards and streets.
Over the past 20 or so years, countless hundreds of aspiring Franzens and Foster Wallaces have enrolled in MFA programs hoping to write a breakout, earth-shattering novel that sets them on the course to literary renown and complimentary trips to writers' retreats in Caribbean resort towns.
"Our poor understanding of the New Testament has brought misery, persecution, oppression and rejection to countless hundreds of thousands and millions of LGBT people," Chalke said.
The countless hundreds of millions of dollars lost due to lost productivity as a result of endless strikes by unpaid, frustrated and angry public employees.
This is grossly insulting to all those who have worked so hard to encourage risk reduction over the course of the past 30 years, to say nothing of the memory of the countless hundreds of thousands of gay men who have died as a direct result of HIV infection.
Similar(52)
Fresh off countless 20th anniversary retrospectives about that team, the latest pointless debate has been about whether or not this team would be able to beat the Dream Team.
According to Val McDermid, Lombroso's anatomical stigmata influenced the outcome of countless 19th-century trials: how many were condemned unjustly for their low foreheads or other tell-tale atavisms?
The heroic school of presidential poetry goes back to George Washington, who was saluted by Byron, William Cullen Bryant and James Russell Lowell, along with countless 19th-century schoolchildren, swept up in the post-Civil War cult of the great unifier.
After countless calls to 21st Century, Debbie Merritt of Collingswood, N.J., still hasn't gotten her roughly $1,600 back.
GITTA SERENY was born in Vienna in 1923 of Hungarian parentage, had her schooling in England, Austria and France, and finally settled in England, but the country that has had most influence on her life, as it did on the lives of countless millions in the 20th century, is Germany.
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