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The phrase "splinters of" is correct and can be used in written English
It is usually used in a metaphorical sense to refer to small, fragmented pieces of something. For example, "The dark clouds drifted away, leaving behind only splinters of their former form."
Exact(58)
Splinters of bloodied wood lay around.
New splinters of dance music have always sparked alternative fashions.
Whatever splinters of ice remain in le Carré's own heart seem to be melting.
Some had been petty traders in Iraq, others were the splinters of a shattered middle class.
Solutions splashed into the eyes should be washed out, and splinters of metal should be removed.
Only splinters of light penetrated the basement, but the dark provided a strange comfort.
At its best, Naipaul's prose is as sharp and lucid as splinters of glass.
All clocks have unbreakable faces, thus depriving prisoners of splinters of glass.
Splinters of jícama and Asian pear provide textural contrast, along with scallions and roasted red pepper.
Lying on the ground, fresh splinters of its pale-peach-colored heartwood extrude from a sleeve of bark.
Splintery fracture is breakage into elongated fragments like splinters of wood, while hackly fracture is breakage along jagged surfaces.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com