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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as adept" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to compare someone's skill level in a particular area to another person or thing.
Example: "She is as adept at solving complex problems as her colleagues."
Alternatives: "as skilled" or "as proficient".
Exact(58)
The Smiths were as adept as miniaturists as they were as musical landscape artists.
After a while, you will become as adept as any New Yorker at never locking eyes.
Plus, the Democrats are just as adept as the other side at milking Citizens United for all it's worth.
He was not a skilled literary politician, nor was he as adept as Baldwin and Wright at self-promotion.
The director, Chris Columbus, is as adept as Ms. Rowling at cobbling free-floating cultural myths into a wobbly whole.
Few composers are as adept as Mr. Bryars at taking a promising notion and wearing out its welcome.
Women are just as adept as men at these subjects, and organisations are keen to have equal representation.
N.H.L. loyalties aside, and as adept as O'Brien may be at working a room, he was not there to relive the past.
Katy Perry isn't as adept as Rihanna because she has been narrowly branded as the Naughty American Neighbor from the beginning of her second, non-Christian music career.
He has at times been bombastic, but he's as adept as any big rock star at taking the piss out of himself.
Similarly, the President's decision to go to Congress was an important one, even if he is not as adept as he might be at working with that body.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com