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Discover LudwigThe phrase "elapse between" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe a period of time that has passed between two events or actions. Example: "There was a long elapse between my college graduation and when I finally landed my dream job."
Exact(57)
(OpenBiome requires that no more than an hour elapse between defecation and delivery).
Years can elapse between official inspections at a given food producer.
Up to two years may elapse between the initial interview and the RSD.
We Chinese prefer no more than a few hours to elapse between the catching and cooking of fish.
Several weeks or months may elapse between the time an animal first shows symptoms and it becomes recumbent.
The previous, cosy assumption of defence experts that some time must elapse between testing and deployment no longer holds good.
The approximate time elapse between stages of the process is indicated at the bottom of the Figure.
Because of the sizable dimensions of these bodies, some minutes elapse between first contact with the shadow and totality.
Four years would elapse between Marlin's fateful bike ride and her first carbonated juices rolling off the assembly line, but a taste of success was immediate.
(See Rule 8.04, with its specification that no more than twelve seconds should elapse between the pitcher's receiving the ball and throwing it again).
Or does so little time elapse between cavity formation and a sinkhole event that it would be impossible unless all vulnerable ground was monitored 24/7?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com