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The phrase "a singular kind of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is unique or distinct in a particular way.
Example: "Her artwork represents a singular kind of beauty that captivates everyone who sees it."
Alternatives: "a unique type of" or "a distinct form of".
Exact(11)
His films dramatise this personal tension, creating a singular kind of hallucinatory realism.
Al Qaeda always was a singular kind of organization, loosely coordinated from the top and using scattered cells with more than the usual latitude for taking initiative.
Armed with menacing zombies, dagger-wielding assassins and merciless warriors on horseback, the fantasy writer can do a singular kind of justice to the raw bewilderment and barbarism of our own times.
Much of your fiction seems to be born from a collision of disparate elements — some kind of cultural trend slams at high speed into a certain character that's evolving in your head and produces a singular kind of story.
Although she was raised in London, and although there are direct echoes of blue-eyed soul acts like Dusty Springfield and Petula Clark in her work, she is a singular kind of belter.
Nearly everyone involved in publishing food books agrees that they are mostly catering to a singular kind of voyeurism: they strongly suspect that more people buy and read the books than actually cook the recipes, that people get a sensual pleasure about reading about food before they dash out to a restaurant to eat.
Similar(49)
So it naturally follows that it has adult funny books, reading encounters of a singular kind, in the stores.
4. Contemplate the "mask of grief". Portman read every Kennedy biography, but simply looking at images of her face at her husband's funeral procession really gave her an understanding of the singular kind of mourning she experienced.
A result is an extremely diverse collection unified by a singular sensibility, a kind of psychological double self-portrait.
The revival of Arthur Miller's 1955 play "A View from the Bridge" (deftly directed by Gregory Mosher, at the Cort) is a singular astonishment: a kind of theatrical lightning bolt that sizzles and startles at the same time, illuminating the poetry in the play's prose and the subtlety in its streamlined construction.
"As Sept. 11, 2001, recedes into the past, there are some people who have come to think of it as kind of a singular event and of there being nothing else out there," Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey told House lawmakers in July.
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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