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The phrase "deemed special" is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to indicate that something is considered or regarded as special in a particular situation or context. It can also be used to express one's opinion or perception of something as being special. Example 1: The handmade necklace, with its intricate design and personalized touch, was deemed special by the recipient. Example 2: The athlete's exceptional performance was deemed special by the judges, earning him a gold medal. Example 3: The lone tree on the mountain top was deemed special by the locals, who believed it had magical powers. Example 4: He was the only one who could make her laugh even on the toughest days, which is why he was deemed special to her.
Exact(8)
It will not collect its 20percentt cut of any profits until the positions are no longer deemed special investments.
There would be a line at the door with a strict doorman and inside would be a collection of beautiful people, all deemed special because they'd made it past the velvet rope.
This first post-war generation was deemed special and had great expectations.
There cannot be any iconography deemed "special" or "different" that is allowed to stand.
Although the hands-on process of developing the design was deemed special by everyone involved, the product wasn't perfect — or, at least, not in the generally accepted sense of the term.
But of all the psychedelics discussed, salvia technically Salvia divinorum was deemed special in terms of both the kinds of hallucinations experienced and the mechanism by which the drug affects the brain.
Similar(52)
Housing & Residential Services reserves the right to make specific assignments in cases it deems special or extraordinary, such as those involving medical or personal problems.
If English Heritage – a charity with the power to grant legal protections to buildings it deems special – could not insist that the Little House continued to be used as a pub, it could at least stop major alterations.
Kailes (2010) deems special needs "an offensive euphemism" that is "patronizing, inappropriate, and distancing".
Woodward (1991) and Linton (1998, p. 14) deem special needs a condescending euphemism, promoted by paternalistic "do-gooders".
Rucker (2014) deems special needs akin to other "socially unacceptable words" and "ethnic/social slurs no longer tolerated".
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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