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Discover Ludwig"lots of corn" is a perfectly acceptable phrase in written English.
You can use it in any context where you need to describe a large amount of corn. For example, "The farmer harvested lots of corn this season."
Exact(11)
Wet plus cold has killed lots of corn seedlings in some fields.
He is also pleased that Mitt Romney dislikes federal rules mandating that lots of corn be turned into ethanol: a rule that he blames for high corn prices.
An enormous lobster pot pie ($25) has lots of corn, sparse chunks of lobster, a few smoky bites of finnan haddie and a cracker-crumb crust.
Factories in China are closing and the good factories are dropping small & unprofitable brands to stem the losses from 20% real wage growth & materials inflating like leather (cows eat lots of corn & most hides are shipped from the US to China for tanning).
You live in a place with lots of corn, and I'm sure there are plenty of farmers around.
Things started slowly, with an ordinary salad of iceberg lettuce with some heavily larded croutons and a thick vegetable soup with lots of corn and potato.
Similar(49)
"You must eat a lot of corn".
That's a lot of corn dollies.
We also grow a lot of corn around here.
The only food we seemed to agree on was corn, so we ate a lot of corn.
It takes a lot of corn to make ethanol, and the feedstock is a major cost of creating the biofuel.
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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