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The phrase "all too typical" is correct and usable in written English.
It is often used to describe a situation or behavior that is very common or expected, usually with a negative connotation.
Example: "The delays in the project were all too typical of the company's lack of organization."
Alternatives: "very typical" or "all too common".
Exact(45)
It is not a special case but an all too typical example of what is happening elsewhere.
MEXICO CITY — The circumstances were all too typical in a drug war in which roadside ambushes involving armored sport utility vehicles are a staple.
She felt his appeal to crude nationalism all too "typical" and condemned him for having "introduced no phrase of constructive hope for a better society which renounces war".
Its attackers lacked decisiveness, or a killer instinct, at the crucial moments Chicharito, in an all too typical performance, flubbed two clear chances to score.
Here's the all too typical arc: When brother-owners first face a common enemy interest payments, ornery customers, feckless employees they tend to work in tireless harmony.
Here is an all too typical example.
Similar(12)
It is also an all-too typical 1970s concrete monstrosity.
Palin is a real American all right, and all-too typical.
But Irwin's career was to prove of an all-too-typical English sort.
His presence drew a larger-than-usual crowd of 17,569 and an all-too-typical result in a 94-86 Nets loss.
"The all-too-typical M.B.A. response is that people can't be trusted, and they're not very smart, so why would you give them this information?" he said.
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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