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Discover LudwigThe phrase "an envious" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who feels or shows envy towards another person or their possessions, achievements, or qualities.
Example: "She was an envious colleague, always comparing her success to others."
Alternatives: "a jealous" or "a covetous".
Exact(60)
"I'm not an envious person," says Morris.
It's not an envious thing to go through.
I do not consider myself an envious person.
-- here she dropped her voice to an envious stage whisper -- " '..
It was said with an envious, resigned tone.
Before he could enact any great changes, however, Hotta was assassinated by an envious cousin.
Bryce Dallas Howard adds new complications as an envious vampire with a bloody plan for revenge.
The baffling ones include "bellibone," for a lovely girl, and "yisser," for an envious person.
This is also a novel on which Robert Louis Stevenson might have bestowed an envious blessing.
"If you're on the left and you're working class, you're an envious class warrior.
"I am not an envious person usually," Mr. Block of Ziff-Davis said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com