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The phrase "some battle" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a specific conflict or struggle, often in a metaphorical sense, without specifying which battle is being discussed. Example: "In life, we all face some battle that tests our strength and resilience."
Exact(39)
Some battle parasites.
Yet some battle on.
"Want to go up there and do some battle?" another supervisor ordered his agents.
People might say they've both mellowed but you can be sure it will be some battle.
At one point, for example, Jenkin says: "We've heard that journalists have to pay £750 a day to get on some battle buses".
It was a picture of serenity, but it was one that has left some battle scars on the people who actually work there.
Similar(18)
We have plenty of young talent but we needed to put some battle-hardened MLS-proven players around them".
WHILE President Boris Yeltsin tries to knock some battle-readiness into Russia's army, a political fight is raging that may yet claim some high-level casualties.
Some battle-scarred American drug warriors knew and loved Mr. Calderoni from the days when their war was the most important thing in the world down here.
There may have been some battle-of-the-bands competitiveness when U2 followed Metallica's gargantuan riffs with the aggressive blare that starts "Vertigo".
So far, this has been a one-way pipeline, but the fear is that some battle-hardened militants could come home with their American passports to strike on American soil.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com