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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a creature of a" is not correct and does not form a complete or standard expression in written English.
It may be used in a context where one is describing a specific type of creature or entity, but it requires additional information to be meaningful.
Example: "He was considered a creature of a different world, unlike anything anyone had ever seen."
Alternatives: "a being of a" or "an entity of a".
Exact(17)
He is a blue sky kind of guy, a creature of a fast-fading era.
Make way for Kit Kittredge, a creature of a higher order.
In an editorial published on Wednesday, the Times described Uber as "a creature of a technology industry that is still struggling to graduate from adolescence to adulthood".
He is a creature of a lost, mythic time, a time of gentleman crooks and codes of honor, a time that, Melville seems to acknowledge, probably never existed.
I am a creature of a limited life, a man who cannot see clearly or walk strongly and, so, cannot participate in all too many of life's pleasures.
He saw himself as a creature of a pervasive but nearly invisible Scots-Irish subculture, descended from the warrior clans of Ulster who migrated to North America in large numbers in the eighteenth century.
Similar(39)
He was a creature of an environment — and an era — that he never really understood.
He was a creature of the third person, a character.
"He is a creature of habit," a club member said recently.
Summer is a tough time for a creature of habit.
Despite her stress-position talk, Clark is a creature of habit, a curator of routine.
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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