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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a basic kind" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a simple or fundamental type of something, often in a comparative context.
Example: "This is a basic kind of software that is suitable for beginners."
Alternatives: "a simple type" or "a fundamental kind".
Exact(8)
In 1977 Austrian zoologist Luitfried von Salvini-Plawen and American biologist Ernst Mayr examined the eyes and eyespots of representatives of all the main animal phyla and concluded that eyes of a basic kind had arisen independently at least 40 times and possibly as many as 65 times.
Mimi wasn't the sort of "gal" George Paxton ever thought he'd end up marrying -- she was like a high-strung racehorse, and George was a basic kind of guy -- but after two years of feeling like a publicly traded stock, Mimi was, as he put it, "a breath of fresh air".
Social acts are a basic kind of intentional act.
Interestingly, in "Trust and Terror," Karen Jones objects to "three-place analyses" of trust for failing to account for a basic kind of trust that terror often undermines: what Jones calls "basal trust" (2004).
A cyclist is explicitly presented as a human being (or creature of some other animal species) cycling: there is no temptation to think of a cyclist as a basic kind of thing in its own right.
On Gibbard's original account, norm-acceptance is a basic kind of non-cognitive state, an evolutionary adaptation for linguistically achieved coordination that is not analyzable in terms of other attitudes (1990: ch. 4).
Similar(52)
Try to get a very basic kind and use a general brand.
You mentioned it very quickly impassive, but it's not included in your list of policy suggestions at the end of the book, and that it seems to be the argument this book is a very strong argument for a class basic kind of action.
Then I went about pitch shifting it into a really basic kind of melody in the interest of creating a sort of repeating drone.
Their existence strongly confirms the validity of the electroweak theory, proposed in the 1970s, that the weak force and electromagnetism are different manifestations of a single basic kind of physical interaction.
But it was ultimately designed to prevent a very basic kind of injustice: ie people being convicted on the basis of testimony that had not been subject to cross-examination.
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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