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Discover LudwigThe phrase "acutely expressive" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that conveys emotions or meanings in a very intense or sharp manner.
Example: "Her acutely expressive eyes revealed the depth of her sorrow without a single word being spoken."
Alternatives: "highly expressive" or "intensely expressive".
Exact(4)
Cynthia Millar's playing of the ondes was so acutely expressive that she might have taken a bow with the singers.
The performance was also an acutely expressive rendition of a piece that is too often handled as a technical tour de force.
Additional attention is due Dean Fertita's acutely expressive guitar and keyboards.
Victor Bobrov used his secure if modest baritone for an acutely expressive performance of "The Young Maiden Walked Through the Pine Woods". Ties to nature and to a land inhabited by magical spirits surfaced in Taneyev's "Apparitions," Opus 35, here rhythmically buoyant and dynamically detailed.
Similar(56)
Their recording of Mahler's Fourth Symphony, acutely characterful and expressive, is among the finest Mahler recordings ever made.
There, Winslow Homer's powerful and expressive paintings of marine subjects and Thomas Eakins's portraits, boating scenes, and other works are frank, unsentimental, and acutely observed records of contemporary life.
Acutely problematic.
Emotionally expressive?
Patient is acutely ill.
Too expressive.
He made hair expressive.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com