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The phrase "an even more flagrant" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize an increased level of something that is conspicuously bad or offensive.
Example: "The company's decision to cut corners on safety measures was an even more flagrant violation of regulations."
Alternatives: "a more blatant" or "a more egregious".
Exact(3)
Although much of the attention has focused on her husband's plight, human rights groups say Liu Xia's house arrest is, in some ways, an even more flagrant legal abuse.
Although much of the attention has focused on the plight of Liu Xia's husband, human rights groups say her house arrest is, in some ways, an even more flagrant legal abuse.
This turns Lady Teazle into an even more flagrant hypocrite than Joseph since she later tells her husband she was not prepared to "sacrifice your honour to his baseness".
Similar(57)
With tricky software on a user's computer, attacks can be even more flagrant.
North Korea's even more flagrant breaches, and then its withdrawal from the NPT, were reported to the UN, but China blocked further discussion.
So entitlements, and rising interest payments, will put more and more pressure on the rest of the budget: less money for other priorities, even more flagrant deficits.
And this, in turn, seems like plausible evidence that in the event of an actual strike, Assad would have responded with bluster rather than the kind of tit-for-tat escalation — meeting our bombs with even more flagrant deployments of W.M.D. — that was the most plausible worst-case scenario cited by skeptics of the White House strategy.
She takes us to clubs where d.j.s severely bleat orders to "keep your hands at your sides and your tongue in your mouth," and to even more flagrant places, where dancers are expected to "show pink" from behind a glass screen.
Even more flagrant, the sentence continues "that Obama's two memoirs were actually written by his pal Bill Ayers, who was and is a University of Illinois at Chicago English professor, having escaped life in prison on a technicality".
These gaps are even more flagrant when HIV and AIDS are factored in: publications may well note that the families concerned have children, but very few then take the story any further.
As the proud daughter of a film editor, I don't aim to poo-poo even the more flagrant self-congratulatory nature of awards season.
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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