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Discover Ludwig"fine intelligence" is a grammatically correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who has exceptional intelligence or a high level of intellect. Example: The university only accepted students with fine intelligence, as they wanted to maintain a prestigious and intellectually advanced student body.
Exact(4)
The possessor of fine intelligence, he was not on a soap-box, or bent on influencing the great and good, though he got their attention just the same.
Cleckley emphasized his subjects' deceptive, predatory nature, writing that the psychopath is capable of "concealing behind a perfect mimicry of normal emotion, fine intelligence, and social responsibility a grossly disabled and irresponsible personality".
Helen Crawford dancing Five Brahms Waltzes in the Manner of Isadora Duncan (1976) looks nothing like the woman herself, but captures her spirit, her style and, above all, the era in which she performed with a fine intelligence.
The Washington Post declared Connelly and Crowe's performances "impressively grounded, powerful"; The Denver Post felt that Connelly portrayed the role with "fine intelligence".
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But Arnold C. Franco, who wrote a book about the unit, "Code to Victory" (Sunflower University Press, 1998), said the wounded officer, Harry Turkel, nonetheless later called him "the finest intelligence officer in the Western Theater".
He had presence and charm and a fine analytical intelligence.
Dr. Sloper, with all his fine, amphibian intelligence, thinks that Catherine is insipid, dull, unimaginative, and disappointing.
Fine native intelligence rather than higher education made him an expert in entomology, and in 1960 he was offered a position at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
The more one looks at these pictures, the more they delight, and the more aware one is of a very fine adult intelligence finding graphic and symbolic ways to tell a story both richly and simply.
When we look at Eliot's writings on culture, we see a fine critical intelligence allied to a fear of possible consequences that is deeply terrifying in the way that in it elitist arrogance masquerades as humility and passionate concern to keep things as they are as a broadly accepting humanism.
Since the only way a mass casualty event may be avoided is to know about it in advance, and since - no matter how fine our intelligence, military, police and security services may be - there is simply no way they can know about every event (planned or otherwise), we are now resigned to the fact that mass casualty killings have become a permanent part of our daily existence.
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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