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The phrase "great melancholy" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It is often used to describe a feeling of deep sadness or sorrow. You can use it in various contexts, such as: - "The great melancholy in her eyes suggested that she had been through a lot of pain." - "Despite his success, there was always a sense of great melancholy that lingered in his heart." - "The play was full of great melancholy, exploring themes of loss and grief." - "As she walked through the graveyard, a great melancholy washed over her, reminding her of all the loved ones she had lost."
Exact(17)
Tchaikovsky, that great melancholy confectioner, has hardly any temperamental affinity with Pushkin's novel in verse.
New Mexico is a place of great beauty and great melancholy, and, like all of the American West, a magnet for misfits.
And then he hesitated, and he turned, and he managed a great melancholy smile while never losing an aura of power.
He was the leading player in the original Mack era -- the heyday of "Shaft" and superstuds, when carpe diem sex brought great mirth and great melancholy.
The second day was a Saturday, and at around 2 P.M. my wife came to me with an air of great melancholy.
At the core of these stories, the trouble plaguing Danny Smiricky is a great, melancholy yearning, nowhere better expressed than in the title story.
Similar(43)
Murakami conjures a tone of great poetic melancholy out of deceptively simple materials.
Lisbon is rather more tranquil and reserved than Madrid in neighbouring Spain, but it shares with it a reputation for great food, melancholy and romantic music, dance, and sport.
I first see Liv Ullmann standing in the door of her New York apartment, and for a moment I am struck by a quality of almost tangible luminescence, an aura that transcends her iconic status as the muse of a great and melancholy director -- the village genius from Sweden," as Ingmar Bergman once described himself.
Driver, whose career from "Girls" to Kylo Ren has been a succession of off-the-wall surprises, gives a performance of great, taciturn melancholy.
Indeed, water imagery ripples throughout: one day, she is "sunk fathoms deep" in a "wash of reflection", another day trying to keep afloat in a "great lake of melancholy"; writing Mrs Dalloway "seems to leave me plunged deep into the richest strata of my mind" – and it is the power of the human mind in all the pleasure and pain of creation that is captured so eloquently in these pages.
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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