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The phrase "a nicer part" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a more pleasant or appealing section of a place, such as a neighborhood or area.
Example: "I prefer to live in a nicer part of the city where there are more parks and cafes."
Alternatives: "a better area" or "a more pleasant section".
Exact(9)
And, like Tony Blair, she could have sought a school in a "nicer" part of London; or, like Harriet Harman, she could have even chosen a selective state school.
The ubiquitous turquoise tower blocks from a "nicer" part of town reflected in a puddle.
She started earning enough to move her family to an apartment in what she thought was a nicer part of town.
If they've been lucky, the real Lol and Woody will be living in a nicer part of Sheffield having survived several episodes of layoff, retraining, outsourcing and offshoring.
For 15 years the journalists used to say, "Now that you're successful artists, why don't you move to a nicer part of London?" And now they say, "Oh, it's become so trendy.
I understood implicitly that if you paid $900 for a jacket you were probably just too rich but I didn't understand why the watch cost as much as a house in a nicer part of Detroit these days.
Similar(50)
"That's a nice part of working here," he says.
It's a nice part of acting; you do get to be part of gangs.
But what does an actor do when he gets given a nice part?
I have good friends, engrossing work and live in a nice part of town.
It's a nice part of the story but I don't think it's too important.
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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