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The phrase "a perfect round" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts such as sports, games, or any situation where something is described as being flawlessly circular or complete.
Example: "The golfer made a perfect round, finishing the course with no mistakes."
Alternatives: "a flawless circle" or "an ideal round".
Exact(15)
"I see it as a perfect round white pearl".
At the moment we have a perfect round number of states.
"It wasn't a perfect round," he said, "but it was pretty good".
The main attraction of the game, Spieth said, is that nobody has ever recorded a perfect round, so there is always room for improvement.
And as all the Japanese tourists documenting their meals with digital cameras attest, the quarter-pound of succulent, buttered lobster meat at Abbott's, sculptured into a perfect round puck and served on a seeded hamburger roll, fits the bill.
It threatened to destroy the symmetry and sanctity of the Premier League itself, where teams play each other home and away in a perfect round robin of 38 contests.
Similar(42)
What everybody does know is that Duval, who said he didn't look at a leader board until the 18th hole, played a virtually perfect round, a four-under-par 67, that knocked the "best golfer without a major" monkey off his back.
In what he called a "fairly perfect round," Fowler made seven birdies in fast, firm and windy conditions at T.P.C. Sawgrass before a bogey on the par-4 18th hole.
Frederic William Howay described this as the "golden round", writing: The Americans had a perfect golden round of profits: first, the profit on the original cargo of trading goods when exchanged for furs; second, the profit when the furs were transmuted into Chinese goods; and, third, the profit on those goods when they reached America.
Perfect round cells have a value of 1.0 and rod cells a value around 0.6 for E. coli.
The screenplay and story, written by Richard Carr, was based on a portion of the 1947 novel, The Perfect Round, by Henry Morton Robinson.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com