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"deep reserves of" is correctly used and usable in written English.
You can use it when you need to express an abundance of something. For example. "The team had deep reserves of energy and enthusiasm, despite the late hour."
Exact(54)
Deep reserves of oil.
He has deep reserves of goodness.
And he locates the deep reserves of personal sadness lingering beneath the entire melodrama.
But one medal is not why they build such deep reserves of talent.
She's fun company, but beneath the LA-girl artlessness runs deep reserves of immigrant moxie.
And hooking up with International Coal does have additional attractions, most notably its deep reserves of metallurgical coal.
Similar(6)
All I got is two versions of me — Kristen has a deep reserve of these characters".
Morey believes that several of the top free agents will ultimately change teams via sign-and-trade deals, and the Rockets with a deep reserve of young talent could be a player.
That isn't always enough time to get things going, and when the screen goes blank just as I'm adding the water I find myself tapping that deep reserve of anger we save for when technology lets us down.
His record on affordable housing is stunning, but his catalyst for building so expansively for the poor, the film implies, was not a deep reserve of compassion but rather the growing pressure he encountered from activists and editorial writers.
Its 827 pages are filled with hell-bent ambition, and yet also a deep reserve of uncommon, even egoless humility: DeLillo never insists, never veers into showy knowledge or egregious or paranoid plot.
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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