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"evil day" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is used to describe a difficult or trying day, one that is full of challenges and frustration. For example, you could say, "Today has been an evil day; nothing has gone according to plan."
Exact(21)
Procrastination puts off the evil day when real decisions have to be made.
So all they are really doing is prolonging the evil day".
West refused to endplay himself by overruffing, but this simply postponed the evil day.
Will he start out again as a trainer, when the evil day comes that ends his riding career?
"The easy option will be to bend to these howls of outrage and to postpone the evil day".
"So people say the only way this ends is with full-scale bank nationalization, and all else is putting off that evil day".
Similar(39)
We saw her buy neither the peppers nor the sack of onions nor the coarse salt nor the herbs that announced the evil Saturday of the fattened pig.
Her story was recounted in "Gangsters: America's Most Evil" (Tue., 10 p.m. ET on Biography).
It has its racists, like every big city, but the evil days of Louise Day Hicks and the busing battles are over.
No one suggested that certain artists might be possessive of the strong and virile artists and give other artists the evil eye day after day.
Most of us every sane person in the city, actually would tell the faith healers to go to hell, put off worrying about the Problem of Evil till Friday or Saturday or Sunday, and do everything we could to get as much penicillin to the kids as quickly we could.
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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