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The phrase "a fine time for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that a particular moment is suitable or appropriate for something, often with a hint of irony or sarcasm.
Example: "It seems like a fine time for a vacation, considering how busy we've been lately."
Alternatives: "a great moment for" or "an ideal time for".
Exact(19)
It's also, perhaps surprisingly, a fine time for poetry.
This may be a fine time for hip-hop to atomize.
(Aint Skeerd, $10) JON CARAMANICA MARCUS ROBERTS TRIO: 'CELEBRATING CHRISTMAS' Christmas is a fine time for soulfulness.
Spring-cleaning season seems a fine time for some personal feng shui with your paper and plastic.
WITH 2014 heaving into sight, this is a fine time for the arrival of a set of predictions about the distant future of business travel.
TWO months before an election, with the government behind in the polls, is a fine time for a minister to fall into disgrace.
Similar(40)
The children's birthdays are all in March: he likes to point out what a fine time of year July is for an Orangeman.
So this will be a bad time for John McCain to talk about Mr Obama as a friend to the plague.It would be a fine time, however, for the sunny version of Mr McCain that we seem to see only at the ends of debates and conventions.
It's a fine time, then, for Bravo's documentary "Desilu," which has its premiere Sunday night.
What a fine time Sunday would be for him to serve another reminder of what a precious talent he is.
They were the ones who had a fine time, and who were responsible for the now wearisome myth of that age.
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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