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Discover LudwigThe phrase "amusing survey" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a survey that is entertaining or humorous in nature.
Example: "I just completed an amusing survey about my favorite childhood cartoons, and it brought back so many funny memories."
Alternatives: "entertaining questionnaire" or "funny poll".
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In 1993 in these pages, Stanley Dry called this "a perceptive, informative and sometimes amusing" survey.
This medium-size, occasionally amusing survey is what you would expect: a fun-house mixture of documentary photographs, booming electronics, videos, cockamamie sculpture and installations.
I'm posting this a bit late, and it's unabashedly from the late-90s school of web design, but Sterling and Lebowsky's annual, acerbic and amusing survey of the world is a dependable highlight of the year.Deep Tags: Toward a quantitative analysis of online pornography (Antoine Mazieres et al).
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While this is very sensible advice, every analyst I know has taken it as a fairly clumsy dig at China, made all the more amusing by a brief survey of the US's heinous history of ripping up the ethical rule book when national interests and preservation of wealth are in the balance.
The survey makes amusing reading at times — almost half of the respondents agree 'online advertising is creepy and stalks you', and more than half agree that 'most marketing is a bunch of B.S.'.
Included here, among sundry jeux d'esprit, are a survey of Isaiah Berlin's wartime correspondence, an amusing portrait of Charlotte Rampling and a sharply observed account of a transatlantic cruise.
The survey sponsored by Vouchercloud, a coupon website, claims to have uncovered the amusing statistic, along with a handful of others, while researching U.S. consumers' knowledge of technology.
During the presidential primary season, it was always amusing to watch Donald Trump tout his massive leads in online polls, the notoriously unscientific surveys in which participants can vote more than once and fans of one candidate often swarm the vote.
"We've headlined here," says Joe Van Moyland before "Baby", the Jing Jang Jong's final song, surveying the pub venue whose name, in the specific context of Brighton, is even more amusing than his band's.
Very amusing.
Less amusing?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com