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"intricate understanding" is correct and usable in written English.
It is used to describe a complex or in-depth understanding of a subject, idea, or phenomenon. For example, "I developed an intricate understanding of the novel's themes during my deep reading of the text."
Exact(12)
Tolstoy has immense care for his readers, and most of his challenges are challenges of sympathy, not of intricate understanding.
He also brings an intricate understanding of the game, which includes knowing the correct yardage from every lie on every hole and being an on-site sports psychologist.
His best ammunition is that he has displayed an intricate understanding of offenses in general and the passing game in particular.
Today, as a two-time former budget director (he also held the job under President Bill Clinton), he has an intricate understanding of budget policy.
Those who know Mr. Lehane say his skill lies in his intricate understanding of how news organizations work, and in his uncanny ability to play one reporter off another.
Our increasingly intricate understanding of the infinitesimal neural networks that form the brain, for example, far from bringing our inner lives under our command, shows us how very little we can do so.
Similar(48)
Understanding the intricate processes behind epigenetics also offers hope for treating diseases, most notably cancer.
Spall admits to reading the script four times before fully understanding the intricate plot, and says that Blick's drama "has no regard for the casual viewer.
Like many process-oriented modern-dance choreographers today, Ms. Monson has developed an intricate intellectual apparatus for understanding movement, which can be applied to dancing and nearly everything else, including doing Manhattan by bicycle.
Hawkins was one of the first jazz horn players with a full understanding of intricate chord progressions, and he influenced many of the great saxophonists of the swing era (notably Ben Webster and Chu Berry) as well as such leading figures of modern jazz as Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane.
The fact that they had worked in the state longer gave them the advantage of understanding the intricate politics of the state better, and also they knew how the state had worked because they had grown in the system ever since they began their careers in the state and continued to work in the state.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com