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The phrase "apt attention" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone giving appropriate or suitable focus to something, often in a context where attentiveness is required.
Example: "The teacher appreciated the students' apt attention during the lecture, which made the discussion more engaging."
Alternatives: "keen attention" or "careful attention".
Exact(1)
They pay apt attention to two white police officers' beating and arrest of Davis outside Birdland, in 1959 but they miss a few remarkable aspects of the incident, including the instant protest of a crowd that blocked traffic, and the remarkable declaration of the judge who dismissed charges against Davis with the affirmation that there's no such crime as resisting an illegitimate arrest.
Similar(59)
Mr. Apted paid attention.
Before that occurs, it is, rather, the particular aspects and facets of existence that are apt to claim attention.
Since no one likes to be caught off-guard, they'll be more apt to pay attention.
Or you might want to slide over to the Bogart, which is slightly smaller but less apt to draw attention from Mr. Abrams.
But still, when a plate of chicken arrives at your table, the manner in which that bird bade farewell to the farm is not something a server is apt to call attention to.
That pat explanation glided past the fact that the E.P.A. document was apt to attract attention, whereas the administration's plan calls for a lot more research in lieu of prompt action.
I'm a basic guy and people are more apt to pay attention and like someone who likes what they're doing". In 1989, NBC reportedly made Berman an offer for $800,000 per year.
Simply put, a local source is more apt to pay attention to who they buy from and how the plants they purchase are cared for prior to purchasing them.
"In the style of 'The Big Sea,' too much attention is apt to be given to the esthetic aspects of experience at the expense of its deeper meanings," Ellison wrote in New Masses in 1940.
Attention All Alliterators "Apt alliteration's artful aid" -- Charles Churchill's famous foray was not wholly alliterative, since not all the first letters are pronounced the same way -- is alive and well on the political scene.
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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