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Discover Ludwig"relatively perfect" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is used to indicate that something is close to perfect, but still has some small flaws or imperfections. For example, you might say, "This essay is relatively perfect, only needing minor corrections before it is ready for submission."
Exact(17)
"It looks like he makes a relatively perfect pitch every time he pitches against us," Valentine said.
One may not write, for instance, that one statement is "more certain" than another, or that an apartment is "relatively perfect".
The coatings have a relatively perfect structure when the annealing temperature is 700 800 °C.
High stretching temperature benefits the formation of relatively perfect crystals with high orientation.
Although neural network has a relatively perfect theoretical basis, EAs have not yet perfected mathematical foundation.
On this basis, they developed relatively perfect seismic wave CT technology, which improved the reliability of monitoring and forecasting of rockburst.
Similar(43)
The stage was relatively flat, perfect for sprinters, and Mark Cavendish, the 24-year-old from Team Columbia-HTC, took advantage.
Relatively simple (perfect for an under-the-weather baker), it calls for an unheard-of two teaspoons of almond extract around ten times the amount in a standard cake along with a daunting quarter cup each of Amaretto and apricot liquor, plus one and a half cups of almonds and four ounces of marzipan.
It wasn't very long, the words were relatively big – the perfect book to bring me back into reading after the onslaught I had just received.
It's relatively cheap, so perfect for those on a budget, and the sheer variety of its travellers was staggering: from European to American to Asian, from student to professional, from 21 to 40, it was an amiable jumble that overturned my preconception of the uni-lad gap-year cliche.
Based on this reference, model cccma was found to be perfect relatively.
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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