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Discover Ludwig"pack of coffee" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a package or container of coffee, usually containing multiple servings. Example: "I just bought a pack of coffee from the store. It should last us for a couple of weeks."
Exact(5)
"A patient once gave me a pack of coffee – an opened one.
But to be honest, I don't feel bringing someone an opened pack of coffee is really bribery".
With a dozen facial scrubs and toothpastes, and a pack of coffee filters, we went to work sieving out the abrasive grains.
A mysterious figure (a guy who works there) tells me there is one very special pack of coffee left that must not be sold to the general public (he'd dropped it on the ground and broken the seal), but that he could give it to me in exchange for something very valuable to me (a bit of money) if I followed him down a dark and terrifying corridor (an extremely bright foyer leading to another shop).
Providers offering postpartum care (community-based) responded "verbal recognition from clients or the community" (36.3%), closely followed by "respect in the community" (31%), "in-kind products" (e.g. pack of coffee, chocolate bar) (19 %), and "services in return" (e.g. cutting firewood, farming, etc).
Similar(55)
At one end of the factory floor, a modest packaging machine — bought used, in China — expels eye-catching packs of coffee onto a short conveyor belt.
They have 1,700 users and are shipping 100-350 packs of coffee per day, but the focus remains "on retention not growth".
There are no set prices for the coffee or HotBoxes yet, but a $30 investment gets you a 12-pack of coffee and a $79 investment includes the 12-pack of cans and a HotBox.
After dinner we sipped another coffee, using both the second and third pack of dried coffee.
Lunch: A can of tortellini with meat sauce, a can of hot dogs, two packs of crackers, a can of fruit salad, four vitamin tablets, three oat bran tablets, a pack of instant coffee, sugar, a plastic knife, a plastic fork, a plastic spoon, a paper towel.
Donohoe, the total pro: coffee-maker, packs of Illy coffee, fluffy bathrobe, slippers, snuggly blanket for naps, dusters, Mr Sheen ('the girl likes a clean ship'), a good bottle in the fridge.
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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