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The phrase "a well versed" is not correct in English; it should be "well-versed" without the article "a." You can use "well-versed" to describe someone who is knowledgeable or skilled in a particular area or subject.
Example: "She is well-versed in the complexities of international law."
Alternatives: "knowledgeable" or "proficient."
Exact(1)
Having a well versed financial and tax professional is important for its proper implementation.
Similar(59)
Yet if demystifying one of gaming's strongest female protagonists is a mistake, handing the reins to a team well versed in fast-paced action certainly isn't.
He had quit corporate America to start a fashion rating Web site, StyleHop.com, but needed a partner well versed in technology.
If you insist on dabbling in film: Hire an attorney or an accountant well versed in entertainment law and bookkeeping.
This is a city well versed in urban living.
"Who are they?" asked Mr. Clinton, a man well versed in Democratic politics.
Sexton grew up in Belle Harbor, Queens, in a family well versed in the spiritually motivating language of Alcoholics Anonymous.
It would however have enormous symbolic importance for a population well versed in its own revolutionary history.
In short, he is a man well versed in the telecommunications trifecta of long-distance, local and wireless.
Ivory, a man well versed in translating cross-cultural narratives onscreen, contributed six Talk of the Town stories to the magazine between 1966 and 1969.
Ferguson, with twenty-two per cent of its population below the poverty line, is likely a community well versed in these ironies.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com