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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fancy membership" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a membership that offers luxurious or exclusive benefits, often in a club or organization context.
Example: "After much consideration, I decided to invest in a fancy membership at the country club, which grants access to premium facilities and events."
Alternatives: "an exclusive membership" or "a premium membership".
Exact(1)
Dwight N. Hopkins, a theology professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School who knows the Obama family, said he would not be surprised if the Obamas avoided a big church with a fancy membership list.
Similar(59)
When he visited home wearing expensive new clothes and other swag, they began to ask questions, and he told that that he'd gotten hired to be a doorman at a fancy, membership-only traditional gentleman's club a well-paid gig that my then-roommate actually had.
Ms. Alba, a 38-year-old jewelry maker, and her husband, Rennie, 42, recently gave up their fancy membership at a Park Slope gym.
It can be discouraging to think about all the ways we're falling short (especially as we curate those yoga posts on Instagram), but the truth is that exercise isn't a fancy gym membership or sweat-tech pants or a cult classroom experience.
A: Fancy that Justin Bieber concert?
Then again, Crawford's breakthrough work was for Soho House, the fancy membership-only club for global "creatives," and other examples in that episode skew toward posh restaurants and luxury retail.
A fancy dinner?
A fancy Sunday lunch?
A fancy restaurant?
She was a Fancy Dancer.
Forget about a fancy dinner.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com