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The phrase "a deep cultural" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing significant or profound aspects of culture, often in contexts related to anthropology, sociology, or cultural studies.
Example: "The documentary explores a deep cultural connection between the indigenous tribes and their ancestral lands."
Alternatives: "a profound cultural" or "a significant cultural".
Exact(50)
But the national frenzy to apotheosise those people suggested a deep cultural unease beneath the hero worship; the culture lofted them into some ridiculously gilded firmament while, at the same time, dissatisfied with their example, it kept searching for more available chests to decorate with war medals.
An act indicative of a deep cultural divide?
Higher education today also suffers from a deep cultural problem.
Pictures of Mrs Palin posing with heavy machines and dead animals strike a deep cultural chord.
There's a deep cultural appreciation there for just-made cheeses, from ricotta to burrata to mozzarella.
Almost universally, the Asian students described themselves on one edge of a deep cultural chasm.
Similar(10)
But Ayık thought there might also be a deeper cultural pathology at work.
Now it has begun to have a deeper cultural significance, too.
But he failed to address a deeper, cultural malaise, says Ms Maryann Keller, a Wall Street motor-industry analyst.
Is this convergence of art and commerce a sign of a deeper cultural decadence, as Ezra Pound would have had it?
But there may be something else – a deeper cultural issue – that's at the root of Harley's trouble.
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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