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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fineness" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a quality of being fine or delicate, often in contexts related to texture, quality, or precision.
Example: "The artist's work is characterized by a fineness that captures the subtleties of light and shadow."
Alternatives: "a delicacy" or "a refinement."
Exact(29)
It was also found that significant improvements in the compressive strength of the hardened concrete (i.e., from 6 MPa to 65 MPa) could be obtained by super fine crushing the slag to a fineness similar to Portland cement and fly ash (<20 μm).
Local sand with a fineness modulus of 2.7 was used as fine aggregate and saturated surface dry crushed aggregate was used as coarse aggregate.
This study used desulfurization slag that had been passed through #4 sieves and slag at a fineness of approximately 4000 cm2/g to replace fine aggregates (0, 10, 20 and 40%) and cement (0, 10, 20 and 40%), respectively, via a volumetric method to make cement mortar for testing its fresh properties.
River sand was used as the fine aggregate, which had specific gravity of 2.6 g/cm3 and a fineness modulus of 2.2.
In this study, desulfurization slag that could pass through a No. 4 sieve and furnace slag with a fineness of approximately 4000 cm2/g were used to replace the fine aggregate (0%, 10%, 20% or 40%) and cement (0%, 10%, 20% or 40%), respectively, through a volumetric method.
There is a fineness of line in combination with a splashy, fumy grandiosity.
Similar(31)
He may have a hard time selling his vision to a new public, but he shares with the Boston Symphony a similar tradition: a mutual fineness of technique and sensibility that could make this marriage work.
Species near the negative extreme had shallow streamlined bodies with a high fineness ratio and a caudal peduncle almost as deep as the maximum body depth (elongate body).
The dollars of 1836 were minted with a silver fineness of.892 89.22%) silver, a specification set forth in the 1792 act.
All binders were interground by a laboratory grinding mill to a Blaine fineness 3200 ± 50 cm2/g.
The ( Coverline{S} A ) and portland cements were employed with a Blanine fineness (ASTM C204) of approximately 6400 and 4100 cm2/g, respectively.
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