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The phrase "an idiosyncratic sample of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a unique or distinctive subset of a larger group or category, often highlighting its unusual characteristics.
Example: "The study focused on an idiosyncratic sample of participants who exhibited rare behavioral traits."
Alternatives: "a unique subset of" or "a distinctive group of".
Exact(1)
Each child is exposed to an idiosyncratic sample of the language (their primary linguistic data).
Similar(59)
As is to be expected in an idiosyncratic sampling of idiosyncratic composers, not all the work was to my taste.
Although much of the evidence supporting their hypotheses is based on a small highly idiosyncratic sample of firms issuing initial public debt, the authors provide corroborating evidence using samples of IPO and SEO firms.
Her Timbaland-produced output from the late 90s to the mid-aughts was an idiosyncratic mix of incongruous samples, choruses that made no sense and funny noises, that could be imitated and repeated throughout the school day.
The literature is limited by a lack of harmonization of measures across studies, retrospective designs, and small and idiosyncratic samples.
Pincus has an idiosyncratic view of his legal predicament.
And, indeed, some of the gauchos had what could be called an idiosyncratic concept of time.
And occasionally, a P.O.C.B.S. will generate an idiosyncratic storm of ancillary mayhem, too.
I have an idiosyncratic form of synesthesia; it differentiates vastly within experiential forms.
In exile Mr Rostropovich learnt English, or at least developed an idiosyncratic version of it.
Thomas Hirschhorn's "Crystal of Resistance" (pictured above) creates an idiosyncratic universe of ready-made stuff.
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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