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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a quite young" is not correct in standard written English.
It is typically used incorrectly as "quite" is an adverb that modifies adjectives, and should not be used with the article "a" in this context.
Example: "She is quite young for her age."
Alternatives: "a very young" or "a rather young".
Exact(3)
That means that she was earning £100,000 as a quite young GP.
Notably the sample under study becomes a quite young sample compared with the population.
"We have a quite young squad and, hopefully, the players are getting better and wiser every year.
Similar(57)
Although he came from a Liberal family, he became a Tory quite young, but was "too shy" to express his views at Cambridge.
In addition, there are some small players with less than €20 million net sales and a few, quite young, originally Finnish drug development companies with a few molecules in the product pipeline.
Craig Winspear: I always wanted to join the army, but I had a daughter quite young, which prevented me going in.
It is worth quoting at length: "I must mention the great success provoked by a still quite young and unusually musical artist.
Beginning with a not quite young couple readying their escape across the border to Belgium, the director Jean Renoir tells, in flashback, the story of why they're escaping and why it's right for them to do so.
Having only been a part of our cultural fabric since 1997, the MMO as a concept is quite young.
He is forty-seven: old for a rapper but still quite young for a rich person.
However, BER as a discipline is quite young (DeHaan, 2011).
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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