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No, the phrase "comprehensible of" is not correct or usable in written English. It may be a misconstruction of the phrase "comprehensive of," which does have a legitimate definition and can be used in written English. An example sentence of the latter could be: "This paper is comprehensive of the current research on the topic."
Exact(2)
Kurosawa has been both criticised and praised for being the most Western and thus comprehensible of Japanese directors.
But never mind, the simple story that unfolds will be readily comprehensible: of love triumphant, of treachery exposed.
Similar(56)
The draft investigatory powers bill published on Wednesday by the home secretary aims to provide a "comprehensive and comprehensible" overhaul of Britain's fragmented surveillance laws.
The genius of this documentary is that it molded earth science into a comprehensive and comprehensible set of propositions that unitiated individuals could easily get their arms around.
For the sake of a more comprehensible illustration of the distinctions, the design of a pre-constructed industrial structure to the three mentioned codes has been conducted.
Writing in Political Science Quarterly, Grover Clark called the book "a clear, comprehensive and yet comprehensible description of the land and the people's relation to it".
Due to the nature of the swine industry, the database provides a comprehensible picture of all movements of pigs in Scotland, and between Scotland and the rest of GB, at a batch rather than individual pig level.
The method generates a graphical representation of the 3D interface which is a comprehensible representation of the two segments of the interface and their possible interactions.
A Cambridge professor offers a thoroughly comprehensible account of the polarization of a continent, without fixing guilt on one leader or nation.
Written in a pleasant, literary style, Kosmos gives a generally comprehensible account of the structure of the universe as then known, at the same time communicating the scientist's excitement and aesthetic enjoyment at his discoveries.
In fact, it has more in common with Godard's jump-cuts, which once seemed so radical and disorienting but which have been absorbed and are now part of the common, comprehensible rubric of the form.
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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