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Discover LudwigThe phrase "dense man" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is a common colloquial phrase used to describe someone who is slow to understand or lacking in intelligence. Example: Despite the teacher's efforts to explain the concept multiple times, the dense man still couldn't grasp the concept.
Exact(1)
But Letts is a tall, dense man, as erotic and commanding in his silences as he is in his quips.
Similar(57)
There is a cameraman (Cary Elwes) obsessed with the latest techniques (like slow motion), and a slightly dense leading man, deftly played by the English comedian Eddie Izzard, who is surprised to find himself playing opposite a real-life monster.
As the match progressed, the cigarette smoke hovering over the marble bar grew dense, the men more vociferous.
Victory remained the ambition yet City's sweeping attack mode would have the ballast of a dense midfield manned by Fernandinho and Fernando at the base and Yaya Touré pushed slightly further forward.
As a result, many of the 1st Division's survivors were swept up and incorporated into Gazan's column, which grew by accretion into a dense mass of 8,000 men, losing much of its cohesion in the process.
The sprints are particularly dense in talented men.
Well-made dense fascines show Manning coefficients n between 0.5 and 1.0 sometimesomoremoremore.
He was born in 1898, into a rough and ready but pious Ulster Protestant family in Belfast; his father was dense and eccentric — a man with "more power of confusing an issue or taking up a fact wrongly than any man I have ever met," his exasperated son wrote much later — and his mother, who died before Lewis turned ten, was warm and loving and simple.
This one begins at the start of his career, in the early and mid-1950s, with staid figure drawings (some with annotations from his mentor, Henry Moore) and dense, blocky bronzes like "Man Holding His Foot" and "Woman Waking Up".
His official company portrait shows a man with dense wavy black hair squinting against bright desert sunlight and wearing a sly smile.
We used to see a "north-south" divide, which pitted the region of the industrial working class – with its dense fabric of working men's clubs, trade unions, terraced housing and rugged pride – against the "softer" home counties.
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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