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Discover LudwigThe phrase "most suspicious" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It is commonly used to describe someone or something that seems or appears to be guilty or dishonest. Example: The police found the most suspicious evidence at the crime scene, leading them to believe that the suspect was the perpetrator.
Exact(59)
On the contrary, the most suspicious".
One of the most suspicious cases is that of Klimt's lost works.
Yet, that is precisely the area in which Brazilian experts are most suspicious.
Indeed, the British, normally the most suspicious of euro-integration, are pretending that it does not matter.
Even the most suspicious expressions softened as we said we lived around the corner or over the road.
The tea was served in a tall glass and looking enough like a hot toddy to delude the most suspicious of federal agents.
Since Belichick is football's most suspicious mind, it would seem that his character-destructive flaw is that he is so driven he validates his own suspicions.
Most suspicious to observers at Pimlico Race Course was the time of the race's first quarter-mile: a pedestrian 25 seconds for the race leader, Ecole Etage.
Britain has discharged its responsibility to Zimbabwe, its last African colony, with what even the most suspicious must see as democratic punctilio.
But ignore the continuity issues and concentrate: suddenly, at 1 49, there's a sight designed to warm the coldest cockles of the most suspicious Trekker.
I would hope that even those viewers most suspicious of "The Dreamers" resist the urge to dismiss it out of hand.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com