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Discover Ludwig"favourable review" is a perfectly acceptable part of a sentence in written English.
You can use it to indicate a positive, glowing review. For example, "The critics have given the new film a very favourable review."
Exact(42)
The centre-back does not give his former boss a favourable review.
There were allegations that she had slept with Grayson in order to secure a favourable review for Depression Quest – though he never actually reviewed the game.
Before they'd ever done any live shows Beach Slang recorded an EP, which received a favourable review on Pitchfork and garnered buzz on social media.
In 1965 a brief, favourable review of Stoner, a novel by an English professor called John Williams, ran in the New Yorker.
The New York Times wrote a favourable review and it may have affected the audience, but it certainly didn't change it from everybody booing to everybody standing on their feet".
In an otherwise favourable review of Platform (2001) in the Spectator, Anita Brookner concluded that his prose was "entirely humourless", but in person, his doleful torpor is punctuated by furtive smiles and giggles.
Similar(18)
It received generally favourable reviews, with Big Cheese reviewer Lais Martins Waring championing the band as "very promising".
On the other hand, reviewers with relevant industry knowledge are less likely to give such favourable reviews.
So far, Xscape, has received favourable reviews.
Yesterday "The Inbetweeners 2" premiered in London to favourable reviews.
But his favourable reviews were also full of an incisive bite.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com