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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a lesser harsh" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "less harsh"? You can use "less harsh" when comparing the severity or intensity of something, indicating that it is milder or more lenient than another.
Example: "The new policy is less harsh than the previous one, allowing for more flexibility."
Alternatives: "milder" or "more lenient".
Exact(1)
Recent moves to austerity, a lesser harsh reality of similar problems to the Middle-East, is prominent in European countries.
Similar(59)
The entire criminal justice system in America is dependent on defendants pleading guilty to a lesser charge to avoid horribly harsh sentences.
Producers raise mostly goats of the Creole race given its adaptation to the harsh environmental conditions prevalent in the area, and, to a lesser extent, Anglo Nubian, Cashmere and Angora races.
Written 10 years after "Huckleberry Finn" and harsher in its evaluation of human character, it's a lesser novel.
That theory ran into harsh reality the first time General McChrystal tried to apply it, in the city of Marja, a lesser Taliban stronghold.
In those countries where the U.S. and its allies intervened, Libya and Syria, and to a lesser extent Yemen, brutal regimes were either replaced by even more brutal regimes, or existing regimes became even harsher or gave way to complete political chaos.
(Wilson received a lesser sentence).
But that is a lesser point.
That is not a lesser task.
He can decide a lesser offense.
A smaller Scotland; a lesser Britain.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com