Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "a slice of human" is not standard in written English and may be confusing without context.
It could be used metaphorically to refer to a small part or aspect of human experience or nature, but clarity is essential.
Example: "In his novel, the author captures a slice of human emotion that resonates with readers."
Alternatives: "a piece of humanity" or "a fragment of human experience".
Exact(4)
Then they took the human ovarian stem cells, labelled them with a green fluorescent protein and put them back into a slice of human ovary (grafted onto a living mouse, so that it was functioning much like a normal ovary).
"The Man Comes Around" is a judgment-day tale as stark as anything else Cash has written, while "Sam Hall" is every bit as wildly humorous a slice of human orneriness as "A Boy Named Sue". A master still at work.
Lythgoe maintains that "American Idol" is less a talent show and more a slice of human drama, "like the kid who turned up and said to the judges, 'Both my parents are deaf and they'll never hear me sing.' And he sang 'When I Fall in Love' and signed it at the same time.
The resulting raw images are processed with the established Fourier phase-stepping analysis [ 8] to extract the relative transmission signal T and the differential phase signal α. [ 16] The sample itself was a slice of human breast tissue about 1 cm thick, fixated in formalin.
Similar(56)
It depicts a slice of America, a slice of humanity.
Oz lifted the cloth to reveal a slice of a human brain the size and shape of a pie plate.
This activity is enticing, in part, because each group of students has a slice of the human brain (replica) to pass around, touch, and make sense of.
"It's going to emphasize what my big fears are". Oz lifted the cloth to reveal a slice of a human brain the size and shape of a pie plate.
Taken together, "heart and soul" in English form a narrow slice of human existence.
Although a rare, niche slice of human experience, adoption contains within it all the most relevant, timeless, and deeply felt – and held – human themes, passions, values, insecurities, tragedies, and judgments.
The other was a slice-of-life story of "crime and punishment," or, metaphorically, a parable of human fallibility.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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