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"casual thing" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It can be used in a variety of contexts, but it is typically used to describe something that is informal, relaxed, or not taken seriously. Example: "I invited a few friends over for a casual thing this Saturday – just to hang out, play some games, and have a good time."
Exact(27)
It was more of a casual thing.
I assured him it was a very casual thing.
(Ms. Smith's line of inquiry was "a casual thing," she said. "I had no ulterior motive").
"It's almost like 'Oh, my God, this is my moment.' I know it's never a casual thing.
There's the casual thing, the day-to-day stuff everyone wears, and then there's the resurrection of couture".
"Such a declaration is not a casual thing," Cantor says, "but it allows for unpredictable changes in the future.
Similar(30)
I can't believe how casual things have gotten.
But lots of Wheeldon's dance smarts go into casual things: street scenes, crowd scenes.
Auburn, in Fort Greene, has been cited for more than four hundred violations in the past decade — "unheeded alarms," Elliott writes, and not for casual things: "inadequate child care, faulty fire protection, insufficient heat, spoiled food, broken elevators, nonfunctioning bathrooms and the presence of mice, roaches, mold, bedbugs, lead and asbestos".
Schmidt sees Google getting more involved in "sort of casual things".
My personality feels suited for loose, casual things, and yet if you put those things on me I am barely visible under the fabric.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com