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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a obsession" is not correct in English.
It should be "an obsession." You can use the corrected phrase when discussing a strong preoccupation or fixation on something.
Example: "Her obsession with collecting vintage records has taken over her entire living room."
Alternatives: "a fixation" or "a preoccupation."
Exact(3)
McCafferty has also lumbered Donal's character with a obsession with the Irish racehorse Arkle, which serves as a metaphor for the couple's sparkling rise and tragic fall.
Hunt, backed by the chancellor, George Osborne, is putting cash before lives, with a obsession on so-called cost efficiency and a disregard for patients and struggling hospitals and general practices.
The equation goes something like this: for the variables Expertise (E), Computational Power (CP), Capital (C), Risk (R), Altruism (A), Obsession (O), Indifference (I), The idea behind the museum, which doesn't yet have a home, is that math is ubiquitous, supercool, underappreciated, poorly taught, and even more poorly learned.
Similar(57)
It can be an obsession, a habit, even a cult.
Mine became for a while an obsession.
It was a compulsion, an obsession.
It's an obsession, a veneereal disease.
It's an obsession, an addiction.
Greed is an obsession, an addiction.
It becomes an obsession after a while".
It's a career with an obsession.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com