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The phrase "a very fine singer" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe someone who has exceptional singing talent or skill.
Example: "After hearing her perform at the concert, I can confidently say she is a very fine singer."
Alternatives: "an excellent singer" or "a remarkable vocalist."
Exact(4)
"She's a very fine singer, but there are also many, many new singers coming up," he said.
Ms. Burton, it should be said, is a very fine singer whose performances are usually a model of taste.
"A very fine singer and person as well as a top-notch colleague," Ms. Borodina called him the other day, and she is no easy diva to impress.
"He's a very fine singer," Grisham said of the vocalist.
Similar(56)
I've always thought that Marilyn Monroe was a really fine singer.
A long, long book by an eminent jazz critic who scrupulously tracks the life and art of a very fine and immensely successful jazz singer and recording artist (and indifferent movie star) who suddenly became unknown in the 1960's.
Written by an eminent jazz critic, a biography that scrupulously tracks the life and art of a very fine and immensely successful jazz singer and recording artist (and indifferent movie star).
A long, long book by an eminent jazz critic who scrupulously tracks the life and art of a very fine and immensely successful jazz singer and recording artist who suddenly became unknown in the 1960's.
A very fine recording.
A very fine line.
A very fine debut".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com