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"gross of" is not considered a phrase typically used in written English.
It is more of an informal term often heard in conversation. If you were to use "gross of" in your writing, it could mean "a total of" or "a large number of". For example: I saw a gross of people standing outside the store.
Exact(58)
ALICE E. GROSS of Southbury, Conn.
Gross, of course, but also misdirected.
A gross of £265,000 resulted.
An opening gross of £15,000 resulted.
Baby has brought the biggest weekend gross of the series.
It went on to a whopping lifetime gross of £3.91m.
Projecting the final gross of Les Misérables remains a challenge.
Representative gross of cartilage was shown in Fig. 1.
The UK gross of £28.7m marks it as a sizeable hit here, whereas the US gross of $55m has tarnished the film there as a costly flop.
Similar(2)
It quickly zoomed to an annual super-gross of around a million dollars.
Adolph Cohen Arnold Grosss, of counsel), for appellants.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com