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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a nice mild" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe something that is both pleasant and mild, but it lacks context to be effectively used.
Example: "After a long day, I enjoyed a nice mild evening on the patio."
Alternatives: "a pleasant mild" or "a lovely mild".
Exact(5)
A nice, mild texture, with a long-lasting and slow developing taste.
Inevitably, so was the weather: At one dismal moment, it looked as though the British, depressed by new war talk and a summer like a nice, mild winter, were going to close their purses as well as their minds to the games.
Pick a nice, mild day and put them outside for half an hour in bright shade, then an hour the next day, and then some more time in the sun, and you get the picture.
Choose a nice, mild shampoo made for dogs.
Use a nice, mild oatmeal shampoo for dogs that won't irritate her skin.
Similar(55)
"Australians work very hard, but have a nice country – mild weather and a stable, law abiding environment.
"But the payoff is that nice, mild turkey flavor".
Wash it with nice, mild body washes.
The "Minnesota nice" mild-manneredness and lilting Nordic twang is, pleasingly, very much upfront.
Chipperfield said recently, "You think Tom is one of those nice, mild-mannered Englishmen, and then you realize he's unbelievably decisive".
Mr. Rumson, who seemed like such a nice man, a mild-mannered professor of something, who evidently didn't believe in sunscreen, the way his nose peeled — she'd met him the one time she picked up the key — he'd left the place well armed, nonetheless.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com