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It may be too soon to announce of the death of that awful phrase, "fine dining".
They have responded to all this with what they call – dread phrase – fine dining, or more particularly "faine dining", in which things are done not to make things pleasurable but because some bunch of pointless, stupid, long-forgotten codes demands it.
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Curiously, it is the men in this collection whose mouths are full of hand-me-down phrases: "fine day" makes acerbic use of "reassess his needs", "find his space" and "to be without having to explain himself".
The hoops the contestants jumped through – man-management skills, portion control, winning over the family – were every bit as important as the cooking, and incidentally there must be a more felicitous phrase than "fine dining", urgh.
Besides, even if we could use the text to discover whether Woolf really did prefer women as sexual partners, it wouldn't explain how she wrote a phrase as fine and poetic as "swim at once into the silent dusk".
The second part of that phrase was fine, nothing wrong with appeal.
A few phrases are fine, but spitting out so many at once makes a lot of people turn away in annoyed disgust.
Furthermore, if necessary, item wording and phrases were fine-tuned to be more readable and to minimize vagueness or misinterpretation.
(A fine phrase, that).
Surely, the phrase is "too fine a point".
Instead, he saw criticism - in a fine phrase - as a "collaborative art".
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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