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Discover LudwigThe phrase "really well-off" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who is very wealthy or financially comfortable.
Example: "After years of hard work, they are now really well-off and can afford to travel the world."
Alternatives: "very wealthy" or "financially secure."
Exact(1)
"If you want to grow your business you have to do it somehow, and if you can't get a loan, you have to sell equity, unless you have a really, really well-off grandpa," said James Freeman, the owner of Blue Bottle Coffee in Oakland, Calif.
Similar(57)
He did really well off the bat".
"We're still really well off".
"The kids from Boston and D.C. were really well off".
I was starting to go really well, off the back of the altitude training etc.
Me and James get on really well off the track as well because he's my kind of person," admits Gemili.
They're not really well off, so he decides to start making crystal meth, the drug, to make money.
Or you're really well off, and you don't want the little heirs to know that just yet.
But as we saw in the one-dayers and the Test he defended really well off the front foot – he got right forward and smothered the ball before it had a chance to spin and jump past the outside edge".
"I wish we could have bowled fuller because Pietersen and Cook played really well off the back foot".
Even if you had a modest bank account, you were really well off if you made more than $75,000 a year.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com