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"impressive mark" is a grammatically correct phrase that can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe a high or noteworthy score or grade on a test, assignment, or project. Example: After studying diligently all semester, Sarah received an impressive mark of 95% on her final exam. She was thrilled to have achieved such a high score.
Exact(14)
The Time cover left an even more impressive mark online.
What's notable this season is that we have a contender that could top this impressive mark.
Frank Gehry, who designed the Bilbao in Guggenheim, is set to make an equally impressive mark on this Guggenheim.
Idowu twice took the lead in the competition, with his first jump setting an impressive mark of 17.51m.
Boston allowed just 20 points for the quarter – an impressive mark on its own and a lofty benchmark for the Celtics' D the rest of the way.
Zico remains the all-time top scorer at the sacred Maracanã, with the impressive mark of 333 goals in 435 games.
Similar(46)
The Gophers recorded a number of impressive marks last weekend in the annual College Hockey Showcase in Ann Arbor and East Lansing, Mich.
This season, one of the show's least impressive, marked the emergence of the normally prickly Mr. Cowell as an unexpected father figure.
President Bush's ratings continue to soar, as is common for presidents in times of crisis, with people giving him impressive marks for his leadership and judgment under pressure.
More Muslim girls now sit in India's classrooms, and they are scoring impressive marks on state exams -- a welcoming jump from a 2008 census that found 47percentt of Muslim women were illiterate.
While durable, the BMW diesel made a pitiful 115 horsepower, so the otherwise impressive Mark VII proved comically slow, with 0-to-60 times of more than 13 seconds.
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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.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com