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The phrase "a little bit linear" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that has a slight linear quality or characteristic, often in contexts like mathematics, art, or storytelling.
Example: "The plot of the movie was a little bit linear, making it predictable and less engaging."
Alternatives: "somewhat linear" or "mildly linear".
Exact(1)
She used to be a little bit linear, and everything was about geometry.
Similar(59)
And so what I can do is I can use a combination of my correlation matrix and a little bit of linear algebra [? ledger ?] domain, to do some very convenient calculations.
And we want to look at this linear system a little bit.
What happens is because of that every once in a while a big insight is available to me that wouldn't have been if I had been a little bit more organized in a more linear way.
Polling gets more accurate as you get closer to the election, but the trend is not linear: it gets a little bit more accurate throughout the summer months, but then a lot more accurate within these final six weeks.
However, the three-dimensional decoding results of the multiple linear regression model are a little bit better than those of the particle filter model.
Scientists have long worried that climate change will not continue to advance in a "linear" fashion, with the planet getting a little bit hotter most years.
A A little bit.
/ A little bit anyhow.
A little bit kooky.
A little bit, eh?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com