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The phrase "a deeper affinity" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a stronger or more profound connection or bond between people, ideas, or things.
Example: "After spending more time together, I felt a deeper affinity for my colleagues, which made collaboration much easier."
Alternatives: "a stronger connection" or "a greater bond."
Exact(3)
There is a sense, too, of a deeper affinity, wrought by aspects of common culture and mutual regard for America.
Such anecdotes of physical bravery go to a deeper affinity between the two men: their shared fearlessness in opposing what Orwell called the "smelly little orthodoxies" of the day.
After spending two hours playing as him he was gone, relegated to a secondary role, so that players would foster a deeper affinity for his character while they controlled a rookie named Raiden.
Similar(57)
There was not a deep affinity between father and son.
A die-hard Yankee fan, he has developed a deep affinity for the space program.
Ratmansky has a deep affinity for the composer's sound world and wild, acerbic imagination.
(He was not however an anti-Semite, and felt a deep affinity for Zionism).
For there is a deep affinity between the Renaissance playwright and the modern author and artist.
The rebel groups under attack are ethnic Turks who feel a deep affinity for the country to the north.
An image of an artist, hoarded, loved, looked at and remade by a fellow artist who felt a deep affinity for him?
The marshy Lowcountry became the cradle of rice cultivation in North America in the 1800's, and even today the region retains a deep affinity for the starch.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com