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The phrase "a intensive" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "an intensive"? You can use "an intensive" when referring to something that is thorough, concentrated, or demanding, often in the context of courses or training programs.
Example: "She enrolled in an intensive language course to improve her fluency quickly."
Alternatives: "a rigorous" or "a thorough".
Exact(17)
It's why he's undergoing a intensive therapy at the Bethlem Royal hospital in south London.
The attacks sparked a intensive manhunt, with police finding the accused hiding in mud near the Esplanade boardwalk.
A1 Bank Robbers Kill 5 Three gunmen held up a bank in Norfolk, a small farming community in Nebraska, killing four employees and a customer before fleeing in a stolen car and leading the authorities on a intensive manhunt.
– To evaluate the intensive management of HELLP syndrome in a intensive care unit in African setting.
The majority of patients admitted to a intensive care unit has signs of systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) with or without sepsis.
Introduction: We examine whether values of PaO2 taken immediately after starting Extra Corporeal Pulmonary Resuscitation (eCPR) inserted in a intensive care unit (ICU) is associated with death in patients treated by eCPR after refractory Out Hospital Cardiac Arrest OHCAA).
Similar(40)
Russell also came to an Intensive with a secret.
In each of these instances, Hineni is linked to an intensive decision, a life-changing moment.
As a result, they should require an intensive care management.
It took an intensive, monthlong search to find a job.
Locatelli is an intensive farmer.
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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