Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "actually rigorous" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize that something is genuinely thorough or strict in its standards or methods, often in contrast to a perception that it may not be.
Example: "The research methodology was actually rigorous, ensuring that the results were reliable and valid."
Alternatives: "truly rigorous" or "genuinely rigorous".
Exact(2)
Indeed, these speculations — actually rigorous abstract arguments — have been developed by evolutionary theorists who, like Mr. Wright, see our moral intuitions as real phenomena in need of an explanation.
I'm actually rigorous about letting criticism of the show stand without arguing back.
Similar(58)
She says: "I'm actually quite rigorous.
Actually, a rigorous assessment is impossible because no safety data are available for all double sulfate salts included in the efflorescence.
Actually the rigorous study of the functions, that an artefact should perform to satisfy the user needs, provides a universal and thus unifying point of view, which is able to correlate the user perspective on the product with its technical features.
Or that the process of screening refugees in the United States is actually quite onerous, rigorous and lengthy.
Ms. Singh also said that the law should assure that a life sentence cannot be commuted and actually results in rigorous imprisonment for life.
We're not hypnotized at the sight, but are actually performing a rigorous if unconscious ethical debate: how can a substance that denotes death have such spectacular beauty?
My favourite painting there is Meryon by Franz Kline: what looks like a few spontaneous brushstrokes is actually the result of rigorous reworking; it's hard to comprehend how you can make something so beautiful using only two colours.
In exposing this tomfoolery, Ms. Heifetz, who has an English degree from Harvard, wanted people to see what she believes: that the standardized tests so many politicians now worship are hardly rigorous and actually undermine academic excellence.
Ben de Pear, editor of Channel 4 News, says Ofcom can be "a huge pain in the arse" but adds: "If you follow the code it actually makes your journalism rigorous and it's there for a reason".
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