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The phrase "actually all right" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express that something is acceptable or satisfactory, often in a context where there may have been doubt or concern.
Example: "I was worried about the presentation, but it turned out to be actually all right."
Alternatives: "perfectly fine" or "completely acceptable".
Exact(8)
"I'm actually all right, getting better.
And the guy's actually all right.
The Suárez bottle-opener is actually all right.
It was reassuring: it made you think the vast majority of human beings aren't racist and are actually all right.
It was only after cast member Leslie Jones was subjected to a torrent of racist abuse and had to leave Twitter, and the film actually came out, that people realised that the movie was actually all right, Kate McKinnon was amazing and those childhood memories were … still intact.
As I thought more about it, I realized that it's actually all right that Zero Trust has reached buzzword status.
Similar(52)
Or you can actually go: 'All right, I've really got to turn it on'".
The thing was, with Wimbledon, I actually felt all right after a few days.
'The wine's actually pretty all right, for once - red is, anyway - and I think I saw someone with a glass of -' 'No.' She was emphatic, Maria.
"They might be looking for something totally different but [Mark, Will and Simon] are performing well in a side that's actually doing all right at the moment," said Richards.
When it accidentally comes on your iPod, once you get past the annoyance that it's on there, you think 'that actually sounds all right'.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com