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The phrase "a earnest" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "an earnest"? You can use "an earnest" when referring to something that is serious or sincere, often in the context of intentions or efforts.
Example: "She made an earnest attempt to resolve the conflict between her friends."
Alternatives: "a sincere" or "a serious".
Exact(2)
Branwell, then a earnest 19-year-old, encloses one of his own poems, and expresses his hopes and dreams of building "mansions in the sky". in jailors' boots.
Two of the gunmen chilled her: Tukur had once been her brightest student, a earnest boy who had never missed a school day.
Similar(58)
"A glory lights an earnest end" becomes, "A dreadful glory lights an earnest end".
One was a Yale sophomore, an earnest fellow from Pocatello, Idaho.
A video clip showed an earnest young conductor leading players in a Tchaikovsky symphony.
A few months back, an earnest young man in Brooklyn explained how to eat a sausage.
Talking to boutique cannabis growers can resemble an encounter with an earnest sommelier.
A: Because we were not escorting an Earnest Will mission.
Wilcox is a restaurant owner with an earnest, matronly air.
As a boy Nasrallah was an earnest student of Islam.
He begins an earnest search for a winning system.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com