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The phrase "so many closures" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a large number of closures, such as in a business context or when discussing events or locations that have shut down. Example: "Due to the pandemic, there have been so many closures in the city that it's hard to keep track of which businesses are still open."
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But he cautioned that with so many closures, bringing in new users was not always feasible and the best use for some sites might ultimately be green space.
Similar(59)
Getting home proved difficult with so many road closures.
There have been so many of these closures over the past decade that, in itself, this isn't so important – apart from the fact it prompted advisory firm Best Invest to state starkly that the last dregs of final salary schemes in the private sector will be gone by 2016.
In the weeks and months leading up to the summit there was a lot of miscommunication about the security measures and road closures, so many Brisbanites chose to abandon ship or stay home.
Uchitelle sees the closure of so many urban factories as a failure of democracy.
The closure of so many schools "really doesn't make sense," Kang said.
With the closure of so many rural post offices, village shops and banks, some see the churches as ideal centres to supply many of these services.
A foreign resident of Shenyang says that the closure of so many factories has at least improved the quality of the air.
Like so many of these measures – the closure of the independent living fund, even the bedroom tax – I sincerely doubt that this will save the money they claim it will, and sometimes doubt that it will save any money at all.
What is needed instead is an end to the closure of so many Asian women's organisations and specialist services that give support to women facing unwanted religious and cultural pressures – and education that affirms the value of girls in those communities that doubt it.
As you would expect, Wilson regards the closure of so many of our libraries as "sad and terrible"; she couldn't have got by without the library as a child and, later, as a young mother (these days, of course, she is the decade's most borrowed author).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com