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The phrase "grim of" is not a correct or commonly used phrase in written English.
It is possible that it could be used in a sentence for artistic effect or as part of a character's speech, but it is not considered standard or grammatically correct. Example: The old man's face was grim of expression as he recounted the horrors of war.
Exact(13)
Not all is universally grim, of course.
The mood on Billionaire's Row along 57th Street has turned grim of late, with condominium sales along the strip slowing to a near halt.
Leading thinkers on technology and culture are understandably far more focused on exciting potential futures, not on the most grim of inevitabilities.
She is the coeditor (with Grim) of Ecology and Religion (Island, 2014) and the World Religions and Ecology series (Harvard) and (with Grim and Willis Jenkins) of the Routledge Handbook on Religion and Ecology (2016).
Comparison to the Eastman-led performances of the original, full-length pieces, heard on the New World album "Unjust Malaise," is not always flattering: Clayton simplifies and streamlines the complex emotions — both jubilant and grim — of these radical works.
Earlier, Mr. Aiken's preoccupation with psychological precepts had been evident in "Turns and Movies," a 1916 collection of poetic sketches (mostly h grim) of vaudevillians, whom got to know from his passion for low comedy.
Similar(47)
Another line that seems to have a sort of grim version of the reciprocity.
Prior has had the grimmest of years.
The grimmest of tasks goes on.
It is the grimmest of ironies.
It is a danger for which the migrants increasingly pay the grimmest of prices.
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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