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The phrase "a quite complex" is not correct in standard written English.
The correct form would be "quite complex" or "a rather complex."
Example: "The problem presented was quite complex, requiring extensive analysis to solve."
Alternatives: "somewhat complex" or "fairly complex."
Exact(55)
Offshore helicopter transport represents a quite complex, socio-technical system.
The passive safety system operation is a quite complex process.
You have a quite complex division in terms of ethnic division and then you've got backgrounds of rural, urban.
In such problems, the Gibbs free energy may be a quite complex function, with several local minima.
This talk will examine the design, development, and deployment of a for-the-field technology that looks simple but has a quite complex background.
Restoration is becoming a quite complex process: a large number of internal and external variables co-exist and may impair it.
Similar(5)
The structure of the JAM-A gene is quite complex, but its promoter also contains a consensus for NF-κB, providing a converging pathway for ANG II modulation.
Elsevier made a new, quite complex, but novel proposal to us at the end of January.
The process of inventing a humanoid is quite complex and a lot of work and research is put into the process.
But its engineers instead took their time and ended up writing a lot of quite complex code, though for a user it's all as simple as pie.
If a maze seems quite complex, it may be best to avoid it for a while.
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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