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The phrase "egg of" is technically correct grammatically, but it is not commonly used in written English. It is more common to use "egg's" to show possession or "egg from" to indicate the source of an egg. For example: - The egg of a chicken is an essential ingredient in baking. - The egg's shell was cracked, revealing a tiny chick inside. - The chef used an egg from a local farm in his omelette. - The egg from the robin's nest hatched into a beautiful blue bird. In these examples, "egg of" could be replaced with "egg's" or "egg from" without changing the meaning of the sentence. However, using "egg of" may sound slightly more formal or old-fashioned.
Exact(60)
A curate's egg of a weekend.
And of rousing: "Hatched from the great egg of Earth".
Some might find it a curate's egg of strangeness.
The typical white family earning $40,000 annually has a nest egg of around $80,000.
So how did an egg of so rare a species wend its way to Aberdeen?
The goatee, then: the curate's egg of male facial grooming choices.
This was then used to replace the nucleus removed from the egg of the first sheep.
The Manchester egg, of course, is in a fine tradition of British culinary hybrids.
So their keepers arranged for them to adopt an egg of their own.
"Boredom," he writes, "is the dream bird that hatches the egg of experience".
Next, Dr. Edwards removed the DNA from the egg of another cow, leaving behind egg cytoplasm.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com