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The phrase "a degree of effort" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe the amount of effort required or exerted in a particular task or situation.
Example: "Completing this project will require a degree of effort from each team member to ensure its success."
Alternatives: "a level of effort" or "an amount of effort".
Exact(10)
FOR many Westerners, Korean dining takes a degree of effort.
But those means still require a degree of effort to fathom.
Mrs. Whitman's excesses of temperament, such as they are and insofar as they bear on her relationship with this little girl, spring, no doubt, from commendable motives and, with a degree of effort on her part, may be brought under control.
Among the various 'commitments' tech giants and ad firms are agreeing to here are plenty of firmly fudgey sounding statements that call for a degree of effort from the undersigned.
It's a straightforward process to step through but does require a degree of effort, given the requirement to upload an identity document scan — so pulling in 11,000 participants in a few days is pretty impressive.
"The central idea is a puzzle the three characters are trying to solve". Yet that puzzle is also one that the audience are invited to decipher - provided, of course, they are prepared to put in a degree of effort.
Similar(50)
In short, they require a degree of mental effort.
A high score represents a student's self-report of a high degree of effort being spent in acquiring the language.
The new diplomatic approach, he added, "shows a real degree of effort and sophistication as well as a deftness of touch not always associated with this Administration.
Design methodologies devote a great degree of effort on deciphering, decomposing, and simplifying problems.
And this time, a substantial degree of effort is going into ensuring that as little as possible is known about the book's contents in advance.
More suggestions(17)
a degree of anxiety
a degree of profundity
a degree of quickness
a degree of truth-telling
a degree of decorum
a degree of name-dropping
a degree of confusion
a degree of supervision
a degree of secrecy
a degree of pragmatism
a degree of admission
a degree of impunity
a degree of exaggeration
a degree of certainty
a degree of grandiosity
a degree of strength
a degree of humiliation
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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