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The phrase "an exceptionally smart" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who demonstrates a high level of intelligence or cleverness.
Example: "She is an exceptionally smart student who consistently excels in her studies."
Alternatives: "an incredibly intelligent" or "a remarkably bright".
Exact(7)
"Tannehill's an exceptionally smart guy.
It's an exceptionally smart man who isn't marked forever by the sexual theories he hears from his father, and Woody wasn't all that smart.
The mother ape is the pupil but unbeknownst to the researchers unintentional hothousing of the infant takes place, eventually resulting in an exceptionally smart adult ape.
Touchy is an exceptionally smart, but excessively shy boy.
Ms. Ferraro seems oblivious to the possibility that Senator Obama is winning because he is an exceptionally smart, charismatic, and disciplined candidate with special appeal to voters experiencing serious Clinton fatigue.
Filled with convincing detail, unexpected twists and quiet moments of power, The Son is an exceptionally smart book that is thoroughly satisfying as a modern, sophisticated Giant, but also perceptive about this country and the eternal push and pull between the old and the new, the established and the immigrant, the rich and the poor, the pioneer and the businessman.
Similar(53)
His half-brother, Travis, called him "an exceptionally bright and smart kid".
His half-brother, Travis, described him as an "exceptionally bright and smart kid" who has "always been upstanding and never had any trouble with the law that I knew of".
Team A is composed of people who are all exceptionally smart and successful.
He was a gifted, exceptionally smart, unique man with a great sense of humor.
See, my son is an exceptionally bright, but exceptionally sensitive little boy.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com