Sentence examples for all a bit spurious from inspiring English sources

The phrase "all a bit spurious" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that seems questionable, false, or lacking in authenticity.
Example: "The evidence presented in the report was all a bit spurious, leading us to doubt its conclusions."
Alternatives: "somewhat dubious" or "rather questionable".

Exact(1)

It's all a bit spurious.

Similar(59)

In truth, all statistics for global television audiences are a bit spurious.

So the public interest defence looks a bit spurious when the information was going to be shortly released to the public.

I've tested this and think it's a bit spurious, but out of habit, when cooking them plain, I stick to tradition and season afterwards.

(As coinages go, this phrase and "cafeteria fringe" feel a bit spurious; both plant the author's flag in old ideas rather than elucidating truly new ones).

Leaving aside the question of whether you could tell that was true within the confines of a lower resolution and smaller screen, those claims (whoever made them) always seemed a bit spurious.

They are all a bit tight.

All in all, a bit of a mess.

All a bit of an annoyance.

It's all a bit ironic.

It was all a bit much.

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