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The phrase "a completely well" is not correct in standard written English.
It is typically used incorrectly as "well" is an adverb and should not be used as an adjective in this context.
Example: "After the treatment, I feel a completely well person." (should be "completely well" is not appropriate here).
Alternatives: "in perfect health" or "totally healthy."
Similar(60)
And Kurt Gödel's incompleteness theorem cast doubt on the possibility of a completely well-grounded notion of mathematical truth.
"You don't need a completely well-formed human brain in a dish to study biological questions," she explains.
Saying that pure chance explains the initial arising of de novo genes is a completely well-defined thing to say; it admits no lack of essential knowledge: what occurs by chance no longer needs to be studied, and thus the evolutionary process is presumably completed by chance molecular events.
Carers first noticed that their child 'wasn't completely well' a median of 4 days (IQR 2 9 days) before the index hospital presentation.
Furthermore, the risk for in-well contamination exists regardless of equipment sterilization, and even in the case of a completely sealed well (due to the presence of oxygen in the well bore).
In other cases, such as sickle cell disease, patients won't get completely well unless a defective protein is no longer made by their cells, so just adding a gene isn't enough.
"When they're well (in remission), they are completely well," said Dr. Jacob Katz, a pediatric oncologist at UCI Medical Center and Hendryck's doctor.
Histology showed the lesion to be a completely excised, well differentiated NET with relatively uniform tumour cells, immunopositive for chromogranin-A, synaptophysin and CD56; no detectable mitoses were seen.
EVA, applied by the DE 5, restored oxygenation through a small-bore TC in severely hypoxic pigs within 20 seconds with a completely as well as partially obstructed upper airway.
Man 3 "There's a bird in it …" Man 1 (changing tone completely) "Well then I might tune in".
She was never completely well again.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com