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The phrase "a more remarkable" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when comparing the degree of remarkable quality between two or more subjects or objects.
Example: "This year's performance was a more remarkable achievement than last year's."
Alternatives: "a greater remarkable" or "a more impressive".
Exact(33)
The two drugs in association displayed a more remarkable effect.
I think this is surely a more remarkable event than it might seem.
Mr. Ogalla, however, looks to be a more remarkable stylist and technician than I had remembered.
For behind the hoopla that has surrounded the.Net proclamation is a more remarkable transformation of Microsoft.
While a sloping lawn might be a New York luxury in itself, the yard can make a more remarkable claim.
But we also need to understand how democratic ideals led to a more remarkable phenomenon in world history: abolition.
Similar(27)
It's inspirational fare, although such a remarkable story perhaps deserves a rather more remarkable movie.
A remarkable man, a remarkable thinker and an even more remarkable dreamer.
The southern aisle, he said, had had "a small circular headed window, filled up from a pointed one" at the eastern end; the east window "was of a design more remarkable for its singularity than its beauty".
The late Kurt Cobain racks up 109 hits, an even more remarkable feat for a musician whose output consisted of three studio albums.
On Tuesday, the court took a still more remarkable step.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com