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The phrase "a much less complicated" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when comparing the complexity of two or more things, indicating that one is simpler than the other.
Example: "This new software is a much less complicated solution than the previous version we used."
Alternatives: "far simpler" or "significantly easier".
Exact(9)
She and others acknowledge that they benefited greatly from the so-called first-mover advantage — that is, they began blogging in a much less complicated space.
Peck himself doesn't compete with Baldwin — he loves him in a much less complicated way than Baldwin loved his own artistic fathers, such as Richard Wright.
And yet despite this, or maybe because of it, Ritts's work still holds up as a sumptuous reminder of a much less complicated time.
As charming as it is, at 217 pages Robert Cohen's first collection of stories can hardly be as encyclopedic as William James's similarly titled 582-page volume on a much less complicated subject.
If Halifax was euphoric and celebratory, Manchester's reconnection with songs written when the world must have seemed a much less complicated, hate-ridden place that it has done recently felt eerily powerful, packed with resonance and heft.
Still, it's a much less complicated process than doling out institutional funds, which requires a lengthy review process, she adds.
Similar(47)
She has simply wanted, since Sept. 11, to see more of her city and perhaps remind herself of a past that seemed much less complicated.
The science of telling a good story is much less complicated that you think.
Interestingly, and in support of a long-standing method, the much less complicated net divergence method (Table 4) has yielded very similar species divergence time estimates to the Bayesian method TMRCA.
"Sometimes we grieve people we don't know harder than we grieve the people that we do know because our relationships with them are so much less complicated," says Norma Bowe, a professor at Kean University in New Jersey who focuses on death and grieving.
Things are much less complicated with Kieron, an addict and shoplifter whose 12-step rhetoric about getting clean is tragically undercut by the fact that his speech is so slurred by drugs that you can barely understand it.
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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