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Discover LudwigThe phrase "abiding favourite" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something or someone that is consistently liked or preferred over time.
Example: "The novel has remained an abiding favourite among readers for decades."
Alternatives: "long-standing favorite" or "enduring favorite".
Exact(2)
My own abiding favourite of Bassani's six books is the one that now constitutes Volume Two of The Novel of Ferrara.
Isi's Goldener Engel is an abiding favourite with the residents – the hunting lodge décor mixes and matches frescoes, stag heads and a gilded stucco ceiling.
Similar(58)
His abiding favorite: Altria.
The Red Shoes, Powell and Pressburger's 1948 masterpiece, is one of the most visually spectacular movies in British history, and an abiding inspiration for artists such as Martin Scorsese, who counts it among his favourite films.
It's maybe because of this abiding sense of a life – and a life's work - arrested that one of my favourite of these photographs is of a young man caught mid-flight, leaping from a rooftop, his arms outstretched against a grainy blue sky.
His abiding memory of childhood, a memory that has sinister repercussions in 1967, is of his father reading his favourite fairy tale to him at bedtime.
The abiding image of my first visit to Lampedusa is of sandy beaches on a beautiful island – the southernmost part of Italy, my favourite country, a long-standing quest finally achieved.
Poverty is an abiding theme.
That's one abiding memory.
A — An abiding faith.
[now written darling.] Favourite.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com