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The phrase "deep resemblance" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a strong similarity or likeness between two or more things.
Example: "There is a deep resemblance between the two paintings, suggesting they may have been created by the same artist."
Alternatives: "strong similarity" or "profound likeness."
Exact(2)
But it turned out that one reason Mathys had come to the lab in the first place was that he had perceived a deep resemblance between the Freudian model of the mind and Friston's free-energy principle, and had realized that there was a historical link between the two.
By means of this theory, Owen claimed he could coherently explain both the deep resemblance of forms in their internal anatomy, emphasized by Geoffroy St. Hilaire, and also the close fitting of structure and function to the organism's "conditions of existence," the point emphasized by Cuvier.
Similar(57)
At a distance of 300 years, Frobisher and Charles Francis Hall show deeper resemblances.
The first image of Game of Thrones' Jason Momoa as ocean-dwelling superhero Aquaman has hit the web, confirming that the Dweller in the Deep will bear little resemblance to his traditional comic book image.
Unfortunately the resemblance runs deeper than that.
His circling, meditative one-chord guitar riffs bore a family resemblance to the deep blues of John Lee Hooker: a resemblance that Mr. Toure was cosmopolitan enough to recognize and use for "Talking Timbuktu," a 1994 collaboration with Ry Cooder that won a Grammy Award.
They are generally very deep and bear a striking resemblance to fjords; some have floors that are below sea level, even though their surfaces are hundreds of feet above sea level.
To immediately address the question of Mr. Cranston's own authority: yes, onstage he cuts a vigorous, imposing figure as L.B.J., employing a drawl as wide as the Rio Grande as the new president backslaps and backstabs his way through the rough waters of a Washington that, in its deep divisions, bears a depressing resemblance to our own.
The panic shows a flaw in investors' thinking that the psychologists call representativeness bias: mistaking a superficial resemblance for a deep similarity.
The animal seems like something that slithers with the currents rather than plows the deep; it even has some resemblances to a bird or a lizard.
And no matter how uncannily lifelike some of today's robots may seem, the resemblance is skin-deep.
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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