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The phrase "a classic display of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a typical or exemplary example of a particular behavior, quality, or phenomenon.
Example: "The artist's latest work is a classic display of his unique style and creativity."
Alternatives: "a quintessential example of" or "a prime illustration of".
Exact(10)
What with the dropped catches, this hasn't so far been a classic display of fielding.
A classic display of power tennis from Djokovic, who after the adventures of his last service game wins this one to love.
On Wednesday night, Father Alec Reid devalued the last massive act of IRA decommissioning with a classic display of 'Most Oppressed People Ever'.
In a classic display of overkill he has named each daughter for the heroine of one of Shakespeare's plays and has taught the whole household to walk around spouting the dialogue of, as the girls put it, "our boy Bill".
The piece concludes with a classic display of Wainwrightian self-deflation, as his admirer admits that Loudon is in fact only his third-favourite artist after Bob Dylan and Neil Young.
I did not hear the Salmond speech properly, because I was writing up the Brown story, but I'm told that the first minister put on a classic display of Salmond, tub-thumping bravado.
Similar(49)
He opts for a relatively classic display of publications.
Along with your favorites, like the classic display of Midshipmen tossing their covers, expect a few new surprises.
Blue Moon is a classic firework display of silvery runs and arpeggios full of hints of the tune, the original I Remember Italy is a delicious, tender melody, and the jazz standby Woody 'n You is as vivacious a Latin dance as anything Jamal might have recorded in his early years.
Vollmer's team used a classic approach of displaying a vertical line, and asking participants to select a line matching its height from three comparison lines.
Best of all, rats display a classic expression of positive emotion, found across many species, including dogs, foxes, lambs, guinea pigs, and human children, called "joy jumps," Ishiyama says.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com