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Discover LudwigThe phrase "few one" is not grammatically correct or commonly used in written English.
It is unclear what this phrase is intended to mean, as "few" and "one" have opposite meanings. It is possible that the intended phrase was "a few" or "one of a few," both of which are correct and commonly used expressions. Example: "There were only a few tickets left for the concert, so I quickly bought one for my friend."
Exact(20)
On average, these studies identified only a few (one to five) driver mutations in cancer genes in each patient's tumor.
To name a few, one residue can have only a small number of contacts, depending on its secondary structure and neighboring residues.
Depressingly few, one suspects.
There were just a few, one assured me not as many as they had thought.
I became friends with a few – one guy named Red and another named Small.
She listed a few: One of the Girls, The Victim and – the most common – The Sex-bot.
Similar(40)
Coaches tested his speed and strength, then put him through a few one-on-one drills.
Clay Harbor (another tight end, not a beachside tchotchke shop) also caught a few one-handed passes, causing a bustle on Twitter.
While bundling Sid Caesar's mail one morning, I slipped in a few one-liners.
And the network has been promoting the big round number in commercials and on Facebook in recognition that so few one-hour dramas ever make it this far.
As Republicans intended, "death tax" sounded to voters like a penalty on every dead American, instead of the few one-percenters.
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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