Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "abject quality" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a state or condition that is extremely bad or of the lowest standard, often evoking a sense of despair or hopelessness.
Example: "The abject quality of the living conditions in the area was shocking to the visiting officials."
Alternatives: "deplorable standard" or "wretched condition".
Exact(1)
Fortunately the artworks don't take themselves as seriously; they have a wonderfully forlorn, abject quality that inspires more empathy than theory.
Similar(59)
In reviewing many of Andy Warhol's works interspersed throughout the exhibit, one begins to recognize a similar strain of reduced material means and a certain abject material quality to the works chosen.
The clearest example of that came just last month, when Cook penned an abject apology for the quality of the maps service on the new iPhone operating system.
As I read, I pondered briefly why the writing quality was so abject, even in the cases of students who had hitherto proved their verbal proficiency.
Today, the emerging Internet of Things infrastructure provides the means to lift hundreds of millions of human beings out of abject poverty and into a sustainable quality of life.
Lambert clutched at the flimsy straw of a gutsy second-half performance that occasionally threatened to rescue an abject first 45 minutes which were bankrupt of quality and ideas.
A vampy Masha earlier on, Vanessa Kirby acquires a feral quality that amplifies this lovesick sister's abject state, just as Gala Gordon, playing the youngest daughter, Irina, communicates a shining-faced enthusiasm in the fearful process of shutting down.
The previous lists of names, meant merely to locate Mr. Dunham, obviously can't begin to explain the particular quality of standing in front of his pictures, wherein abject subject matter and woolly psychodrama are tempered by low-key amiability.
If there is an element of the abject to some stories about Wagner fans, probably none captures that quality more than that of the 19th-century Austrian composer Anton Bruckner.
"The random infliction of violent death, abject terror," as well as "heinousness as a norm of behavior," are listed by him as among the qualities necessary for an anti-war film – along with a sense of balance and context.
That was abject cowardice".
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com