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The phrase "perfect adjective" is not a complete sentence and therefore is not correct and usable in written English
You can use adjectives in their appropriate form (i.e. "perfect") when describing something in writing. For example, "The conditions were perfect for a relaxing day at the beach."
Exact(2)
But more than anything it provided the perfect adjective to describe the drama that had just unfolded over four days at Augusta National golf club: cool.
"Relentless" is certainly the perfect adjective to describe the company's growth, and the tenacity with which Mr. Bezos has executed his vision: to use the web's infinite shelf space to create what Mr. Stone calls "the merchandiser's dream of the everything store — a store with infinite selection".
Similar(58)
Praise was considered inflated when it involved an additional word such as an adverb ("incredibly") or adjective (perfect").
The adjective "perfect" when applied to a human life suggests one that is maximally good or excellent, but if goods conflict and are incomparable, then a plurality of different types of life may have a title to that designation or perhaps no life can be strictly perfect, but many can be very good.
At a different restaurant a few years back, a dining companion noted that marrow had a "druggy" taste and effect all its own, and I thought that adjective was perfect.
But remember: Perfect can be an adjective (PER-fect) or a verb (per-FECT), in which case the solution is EDIT.
Interrater reliability for correctly recalled adjectives was perfect, with Cohen's Kappa = 1.00.
But if blimp racing seems oxymoronic (or even the last three syllables of that adjective), it makes perfect sense to the artist Olav Westphalen, whose "First Long Island City Blimp Derby" is the summer installation at the SculptureCenter.
Despite this so far sedate linguistic palate, he pulls off a lovely surprise with the coined compound-adjective, "Persian-perfect".
per·fect [adj., n. pur-fikt; v. per-fekt] adjective 1. conforming absolutely to the description or definition of an ideal type: a perfect sphere; a perfect gentleman.
Participles are verbal adjectives formed with the suffixes (active imperfective and aorist participle), (perfect participle) and or (mediopassive participle), among others.
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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