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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a subtle mixture" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a blend of elements that are not immediately obvious or are delicately combined.
Example: "The artist's latest painting is a subtle mixture of colors that evoke a sense of tranquility."
Alternatives: "a delicate blend" or "a nuanced combination".
Exact(3)
Mr. Kaufmann is tremendously appealing, but his emotions are not complicated; he is happy or sad or angry or peaceful, but rarely a subtle mixture of those.
He works hard to give her a subtle mixture of bulldozing certainty and girl-specific vulnerability, including a former best friend who's turned popular and now tortures her, and a boyfriend who dumps her when her earnestness and intensity prove too much.
Richard Jolly, a colleague of Mr Haq, recalled this week that "he would hold audiences spellbound, weaving together his proposals and vision in a subtle mixture of technical analysis, political cunning and with the tones and uncompromising principles of the true preacher".Has the preaching brought any benefit to the poor that Mr Haq clearly cared about?
Similar(56)
When English-speaking Indians say "curry," they usually mean a stew flavored with a subtle, customized mixture of spices and finished with any of an assortment of thickeners, enrichers, and natural colorings.
While Chekhov's works have become a staple of the international repertory, cherished for their subtle mixture of the comic and the tragic, Ostrovsky has mostly retreated to the textbooks outside of his own country.
Because there is no rush to complete them by a certain time, their creation will relieve your summer turmoil, not add to it, and the subtle mixture of flavors will bring you new friends, even if you're dining alone.
He uncovers alcohol's deepest mysteries, chasing the physics, molecular biology, organic chemistry, and even metallurgy that power alcohol production, and the subtle mixture of psychology and neurobiology that fuels our taste for those products.
While her companion is struck by the banality of the bombs' names — Fat Man, Little Boy — she remarks that they could never have been anything but benign: "What would you have named them, then?" It is this subtle mixture of melancholy and world-historical resignation that gives Skibsrud's collection its potency.
A subtle signal?
Iranians are a subtle people.
A subtle or obvious message?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com