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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a massive enough" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used when discussing the sufficiency of size or magnitude in relation to a particular context or requirement. Example: "We need to find a massive enough solution to address the growing environmental concerns."
Exact(3)
If Alice were merely given a massive enough set of responses, it would seem as creative as a human -- which is not as creative as we might like to believe.
A massive enough campaign, coupled with other incentives, could help ease crowding in the metropolis.
But the military road to absolute nonproliferation is closed, in the case of Iran, for instance, because social norms on the part of the United States prevent it from mounting a massive enough attack (read: high civilian casualties) to keep Iran's nuclear program from rising from the ashes -- and, this time, unfettered by international constraints it would now disdain.
Similar(57)
Just days before Francis landed in Mexico City, the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team, a group independent of Mexican authorities, disputed the government's official explanation, concluding through an evaluation of the Cocula site that a fire massive enough to have consumed so many bodies could not have occurred there.
A planetary-mass object (PMO), planemo, or planetary body is a celestial object with a mass that falls within the range of the definition of a planet: massive enough to achieve hydrostatic equilibrium (to be rounded under its own gravity), but not enough to sustain core fusion like a star.
Whether it has a core massive enough to have pulled in all its gas is the central question in the debate over how Jupiter formed.
Alternative energy had to be economically competitive before it was adopted on a scale massive enough to truly counter the threat of Climate Change.
Ikeda's installation overwhelms visitors' senses with intense synchronized light patterns on a scale massive enough to make the experience totally immersive.
The second is whether something has actually changed in the nature of global economic activity to facilitate true catch-up across the emerging world, or whether we have merely come through a period in which stepwise catch-up finally came to an economy massive enough to temporarily bend patterns of economic activity around it.
Just hiring a derrick barge massive enough to do the job can cost $700,000 a day.
If an object is massive enough, it can create a funnellike hole in spacetime so steep that not even light can escape from it a black hole.
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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