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Discover LudwigThe phrase "tight to a" is not a standard phrase in English, and as such is not typically used in written English.
However, if the context is clear, it can be used. For example, you could say, "She gritted her teeth, gripping tight to a railing."
Exact(28)
The cover art featured him as a punked-out, pigeon-toed Buddy Holly holding tight to a vintage Jazzmaster, a guitar he came to own by trading in a Telecaster.
But he is also criticized for holding tight to a security-first mentality.
She held tight to a younger woman, weeping, her body shaking anew.
His best throw of the day might have been a slant high and tight to a well-covered Joe Adams.
Each is the blurred, scrapped-down vision of a man holding tight to a rope which swings free from what?
On this evidence, even the lowliest 18th-century woman, however degraded, held tight to a degree of social aspiration.
Similar(32)
With the Rays hanging tight to an 8-7 lead in the eighth, the Red Sox had runners on first and second.
"With the lifts, the snowcat and the buses, you can always find untracked terrain," he added, grabbing on tight to an armrest as the snowcat rumbled uphill.
He learned to ride with his feet, clamping them tight to an animal's sides and reacting to the slightest twitch.
One of Project Wild's suggestions is to tie a pair of tights to a stick as a makeshift pond dipping net.
Its reactive site is too tight to fit a blocking group when the nucleotide is positioned correctly for the reaction.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com