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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a very posh" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is luxurious, elegant, or high-class, often in relation to lifestyle, fashion, or places.
Example: "The restaurant we visited last night was a very posh establishment, with exquisite decor and gourmet cuisine."
Alternatives: "a very upscale" or "a very luxurious".
Exact(39)
"This is a very posh corner of Edinburgh.
The reality is closer to a night in a very posh prison.
Lots of medications in shiny cupboards in a very posh flat.
'Reading Tatler is rather like staying in a very posh hotel,' he says.
I've been told the Christmas party is a very posh affair.
A small contingent is a very posh lot indeed – rich, beautiful, creative types from Delhi, St Petersburg and Tel Aviv.
Similar(21)
He laughs again: "It tells historical, political, personal stories in what is essentially a very, very posh soap opera".
Flannery himself described the programme as a 'very, very posh soap opera' but the final four episodes feel too often like run-of-the-mill soap opera.
Leaves a lot of very posh stationery for recycling.
The result is a sort of very posh French sushi bar.
We are sitting in a very big, very posh and very empty restaurant in High Holborn, where Corré has taken me for lunch following a tour of the new Agent Provocateur offices in Farringdon, which are all black-tasselled lampshades, crimson sofas and curvaceous women in high heels and tight dresses.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com