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The phrase "a fully trained" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone or something that has completed a training process and is now proficient or qualified in a particular area.
Example: "After months of rigorous training, she is now a fully trained professional in her field."
Alternatives: "completely trained" or "thoroughly trained".
Exact(60)
A fully trained professional singer couldn't have done that record.
Although he was a fully trained musician, he considered himself an amateur.
Would I work as an assistant, a doctor-in-training equivalent or a fully trained physician?
Ana's husband is also a fully trained vet, he is working as a builder in the UK.
Every couple would be obliged to give notice to and be married before a fully trained registrar.
A fully trained dolphin on public display can be worth more than $100,000£65,00000), compared with as little as $100£6565) if butchered for meat.
Guarnaccio accepts that if it does all go wrong, he can at least fall back on his former profession as a fully trained hairdresser.
Edward Lucie-Smith, a leading art historian, said: "Ronnie is in the top flight as a musician, but he's also a fully trained artist – and it shows".
He's a fully trained working snake, but it's hard to put a price on him, because Tasia would never sell him.
A fully trained dolphin on public display can be worth more than $100,000£62,00000), compared with as little as $100 if butchered for meat.
Adam Dalgleish, the poet-detective of Scotland Yard, Cordelia Gray may seem innocent and even naive, more of an amateur than a fully trained professional.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com