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Discover Ludwig"a fine-tuning" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to the act of making minor changes or adjustments to something to improve it in some way, often with the goal of achieving greater accuracy or effectiveness. For example, "After a few months, the team decided to do a fine-tuning of the project plan to ensure it remained on track."
Idiom
Fine tuning.
Small adjustments to improve something or to get it working are called fine tuning.
Exact(40)
"Rather, it's a fine-tuning of the existing structure".
His report is likely to advise little more than a fine-tuning of present practice in British boardrooms.
Instead, the watch is more of a fine-tuning for the line.
Thus, CPE corresponds to a fine-tuning of synchronization for positioning purposes.
This protection lies not simply in a fine-tuning, an overhaul, or even a paring of our regulatory regime.
Redemption is not an abstract philosophical or theological construct, but a fine-tuning of the human soul that helps us to love more and to be more sensitive.
Similar(20)
But Mr. Yang's plan appears to be more a fine tuning of Yahoo's existing strategy than a change in course.
Each characteristic sweeps about 20 MHz with a fine tuning resolution = 150 kHz.
The coarse-fine ATVA is divided into a coarse tuning segment and a fine tuning segment.
For both these purposes, a fine "tuning" of their thermodynamic properties and reactivity is of high interest.
This is frequently referred to as a "fine tuning" of the cosmos.
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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