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Discover LudwigThe phrase "actually luckier" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that someone is more fortunate than another person or situation, often in a surprising or unexpected way.
Example: "Despite the challenges, I feel that I am actually luckier than most people in my situation."
Alternatives: "truly more fortunate" or "genuinely luckier".
Exact(1)
And in a terrible way, Rose was actually luckier than most: we found her when she was still alive.
Similar(59)
I've got a friend in prison at the moment and I thought he's actually really lucky compared to how hard they get it in America.
"I think I was actually really lucky to get in the play-off".
I'm actually lucky.
I'm actually lucky, because I will eventually get paid.
Despite their dominance, Portugal were actually lucky not to head into the break trailing.
I'm actually lucky it didn't happen to me much earlier.
This was actually lucky because otherwise thousands may have been killed.
"If you have one case very early on and you catch it, you're actually lucky," he says.
Mr. Colvolino was actually lucky: the mercury hit only 98.6 degrees at its peak in Rome today.
When he was bowled through the gate by Johnson's swerving in-ducker in the first innings you felt like he was actually lucky.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com