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The word "grids" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a network of parallel or intersecting lines that form squares or rectangles, often used to organize or display information. Example: The map of the city is divided into grids to make it easier for tourists to navigate and find their desired locations.
Dictionary
grids
noun
Plural of grid
Exact(60)
The Yemeni government had already announced a plan to tighten security measures at foreign embassies – particularly those of western countries – sea ports and airports and other facilities of strategic importance, including oil pipelines and power grids.
Demand side response is also helping to drive the momentum behind smart grids.
Among them is a project by the French artist Daniel Buren, consisting of 124 metal grids that were used for storage and transportation of mineral wool at the factory.
To develop this market, more work also needs to be done to address fears that the increase in smart devices and smart grids will lead to more security breaches in the future.
Smart city groups such as Future City Glasgow, MK Smart and other schemes in Bristol and Manchester are also helping boost the development of smart grids.
"In a way, the topic of smart grids should disappear soon because whatever they do will automatically be smart," he adds.
While the transition to smart grids will be a gradual process, many argue it is also an inevitable one.
But even if you find Hirst's series of paintings with grids of multicoloured circles on a white background attractive, they occupy a very small place in the history of art.
"Energy costs for businesses, particularly small businesses, are always a big challenge – especially if that business is energy intensive," says Rob McNamara, executive director of SmartGrid GB, which is campaigning for the development of smart grids in Britain.
Inspired by the patterns she sees in everyday things, Hasking works with single and multiple images to create a repeating pattern that from a distance reads as texture, but on closer inspection reveals more – the regular grids of letters in the word search papers, for example, turn out to be full of concealed words (many of them Hasking family jokes).
A huge one might happen at any time, we'll have little or no warning, and its extinguishing effect on power grids across the world could easily be like Brian Blessed sneezing on a candle.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com