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The phrase "much skills" is not grammatically correct or commonly used in written English.
The correct form would be "many skills" or "much skill." You can use "much skill" when talking about a general ability or talent that someone possesses. Example: He showed much skill in playing the guitar.
Exact(10)
"I don't have so much skills but cinema is magic.
Not much skills, female tears and a winner so thin who makes me doubt of her love for great cooking, baking," he tweeted back in October.
These aren't so much skills as tendencies — inclinations — that prove to be every bit as consequential as the stuff of rankings and record books.
Not much skills, female tears and a winner so thin who makes me doubt of her love for great cooking, baking," he wrote.
Not much skills, female tears and a winner so thin who makes me doubt of her love for great cooking, baking".
Workers, indexed by i, differ in their endowment of skills, labelled η i, and they endogenously decide how much skills to deploy in their jobs.
Similar(49)
But in temporal matters the president never showed much skill.
It requires as much skill as an aria.
Her Government turns out to be composed with much skill.
"You didn't need much skill," she said.
He saw so much skill going to waste.
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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