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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a classic kind" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a type or category that is considered traditional or exemplary in a certain context.
Example: "This restaurant serves a classic kind of Italian cuisine that has been passed down through generations."
Alternatives: "a traditional type" or "an iconic variety".
Exact(7)
There's a classic kind of professionalism in the act, sort of like the old country stars — Loretta Lynn, Johnny Cash.
Lurie's disgrace is of a classic kind - an affair with a student - and he does nothing to protect himself from its consequences.
"I'm a classic kind of guy," said Larry Olsen, who had driven in from Redwood City to see the museum's exhibition of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Anderson's blue-chip collection of modern art.
Even the Red Sox, who must have felt as if they were watching a repeat in losing a tight game to the Yankees, grudgingly admitted it was a classic kind of night.
Authentic as its photographic subjects are—"We were the first to use real people, and captions saying who and where they were," Chouinard said it is a classic kind of aspirational branding.
You want to, in a classic kind of Labour half-way house, cut university tuition fees by a third, which is better than what we've got now, but just a very modest improvement," she said.
Similar(53)
"He's a classics kind of guy.
MR: It seems to be a huge modern classic, kind of out of nowhere.
Gather an empty pop can and a can opener (the classic kind, not electric).
Hamlin's a classic comedy kind of guy.
This work, of course, is a classic, the kind that deserves applause when it starts.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com