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Discover LudwigSentence The phrase "impressive on" is not a standard phrase in the English language
If you mean to say something was impressive or had a good impression on you, then you could say "impressive to" or "impressive upon"; for example, "Her artwork was impressive upon me."
Exact(58)
As fantasies go, this one looked pretty impressive on paper.
And he was particularly impressive on Tuesday".
It wasn't very impressive on either side".
The project is impressive on other fronts.
(Mr. Hopkins was also impressive on Metallica's "Enter Sandman").
THE results have been impressive, on items big and small.
It was strong collective interplay, impressive on its own merits.
Clegg is impressive on the stump, breezy, articulate, upbeat.
Dane Haylett-Petty was impressive on the wing.
For him, Sarkozy had been impressive on the world stage.
Similar(1)
Wollenberg doubles as an offstage instrumentalist and impressive on-stage singer, and David Möschler provides expert instrumental support.
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