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The phrase "a seriously smart" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize someone's intelligence or cleverness in a casual or informal context.
Example: "She is a seriously smart student who always excels in her studies."
Alternatives: "incredibly intelligent" or "extremely clever."
Exact(2)
With the commanding Ms. Arianda giving a performance of such intoxicating allure, "Venus in Fur" provides a seriously smart and very funny stage seminar on the destabilizing nature of sexual desire: vanilla-flavored, kink-festooned or anything in between.
Founded two years ago by a seriously smart team of search experts, Truveo is tackling the very difficult problem of creating metadata from video out of whole cloth – unlike text-based content, it is very difficult to determine context of video and audio content without a human to actually view it (which is error prone and doesn't scale).
Similar(58)
The area of Manhattan between 34th Street and 59th Street, from 8th Avenue to the Hudson River was once a rogue's gallery of wrong 'uns, but is now seriously smart.
In short, it will be a few seasons yet before your wardrobe will be boasting some seriously smart legwear.
That's architecture, that's structure – this guy is seriously smart.
As Partridge points out, the Crick's reputation for innovation has already been cemented through some seriously smart engineering.
This fall's guest curator is the seriously smart choreographer Trajal Harrell (who has his own show at the Kitchen Feb. 9-12).
Kipseli House, Avlaki This luxury villa sleeps up to 10 people in five seriously smart bedrooms, with whitewashed walls, distressed furniture and subtle nautical hues.
The debate that I'm interested in having is with seriously smart people about how we design institutions in the 21st century that will genuinely address problems of poverty and educational underachievement.
They need to be seriously smart / talented in their field to make the minimum grade.
The USA Today editorial board believes that American universities are not producing enough "seriously smart engineers and code writers," adding, "It's time to give America's technological leaders the tools they need to compete in a global marketplace".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com