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"deluge with" is a perfectly valid construction in written English.
You can use it to describe an overwhelming amount of something, usually of a negative connotation. For example, "The president was deluged with criticism after his speech."
Exact(15)
2. Sprinkle or deluge with sugar, to taste.
More recently this has turned into a deluge, with many more complaints posted on internet consumer talkboards.
Ms. Fox conjured the ethos of Laurel Canyon singer-songwriters performing Jackson Browne's "Before the Deluge" with a trio that supplied Crosby, Stills and Nash-style harmonies.
Breakfast on Pluto picked up McCabe's second Booker nomination, but also alienated some, a trickle of negative reviews that turned into a deluge with McCabe's next two books.
Bobby grabs it and panics, slewing across onto the wrong side of the road, and thus into the overwhelming question of the film: When fate comes barrelling toward you through the deluge, with its headlights on, what will save you?
In America the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has openly acknowledged the problems it has already encountered coping with the deluge, with one commissioner blaming "inconsistencies and errors" in the rules.
Similar(45)
He was deluged with responses.
The Kremlin was deluged with offers.
Employers are deluged with CVs.
"They're deluged with information," Williams said.
The bank was deluged with vitriol.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com