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The phrase "a carefully modulated" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that has been adjusted or controlled with precision, often in contexts related to tone, sound, or behavior.
Example: "The speaker delivered a carefully modulated performance that captivated the audience."
Alternatives: "a finely tuned" or "a precisely adjusted".
Exact(12)
Its bands of gray, white, black, yellow and darker yellow convey a landscape at sunrise, a carefully modulated geometry and a Renaissance altarpiece, absent the figures.
And there was Justice Ginsburg, writing a carefully modulated, almost minimalist dissenting opinion in which she did not go so far as to declare Kentucky's protocol unconstitutional.
Pietersen will use a carefully modulated, rigorously scrutinised interview in the newspaper which carries his ghostwritten banalities to set the agenda.
As the superstar Rachel Marron, Ms. Headley is a carefully modulated, fire-and-ice blend of professional extroversion and personal guardedness in this production at the Adelphi Theater.
As the superstar Rachel Marron, Ms. Headley is a carefully modulated, fire-and-ice blend of professional extroversion and personal guardedness.
Without sacrificing any of Volpone's hearty glee Mr. Spinella gives a carefully modulated comic performance as a hedonistic character who could easily become brutally ugly or outrageously broad.
Similar(48)
He speaks in a slow, carefully modulated manner developed during his years as a teacher, occasionally tolerating interruptions from my grandmother Jo Nelle, who is a sub-five-foot ball of high energy.
A good few carefully modulated sentences stretch out euphoniously over half a page or more.
His press conferences are a string of carefully modulated banalities.
Hanger steak was tender and gorgeously juicy, with lively sides of sweet-potato mash and caramelized onions and leeks, and a pomegranate reduction of carefully modulated sweetness.
In the novel Huxley describes the mass production of children by what we would now call in vitro fertilisation; interference in the development process of infants to produce a number of "castes" with carefully modulated levels of capacities to enable them to fit without complaining into the various societal and industrial roles assigned to them; and Pavlovian conditioning of children from birth.
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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