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The phrase "a sort of imagined" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is not real or tangible but exists in the mind or imagination.
Example: "The artist created a sort of imagined world where anything was possible, filled with vibrant colors and fantastical creatures."
Alternatives: "a kind of envisioned" or "a type of conceived".
Exact(1)
They started to view themselves as casualties of a sort of imagined reverse-racism, forced to share power they entertained exclusively for so long.
Similar(59)
You have to just sort of imagine.
I sort of imagined what it would be, [but then] I put it on and was like 'Wow!
"I'd sort of imagined having it at the back of my closet for the rest of my life," she explains to him.
"Every generation has sort of imagined that its own Christmas is inauthentic and that the previous generation's Christmas was somehow more authentic," he said.
"So I just sort of imagined, what could fuel me, what fantasy could I really sort of find rich pickings from?
I sort of imagine them living in an attic in a library in Canada or something".
I could sort of imagine him planting a bomb, but it was impossible to imagine him shouting someone down.
"We can sort of imagine it is a much better, quieter, safer, more efficient helicopter.
I sort of imagine you running a postal route every day for training, but you're retired now, how did you train and how do you train now?
On a podcast, though, "You can bring it to life and close your eyes and sort of imagine it without, like, watching porn on a plane".
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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