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Discover LudwigThe phrase "so distinctly that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate a clear and specific manner in which something is perceived or understood, often followed by a result or consequence. Example: "She explained the concept so distinctly that everyone in the room understood it immediately."
Exact(1)
Sackville's rare gift is for rendering the ordinary so distinctly that it becomes fantastic.
Similar(55)
There is a notorious and baffling phrase of Donne's, in "The Second Anniversary," when he is commemorating "the Religious death of Mistress Elizabeth Drury," who was, he says, "richly and largely hous'd": Her pure, and eloquent blood Spoke in her cheeks, and so distinctly wrought, That one might almost say, her body thought.
7 p.m. 8) TASTE OF AFRICA Tourist-oriented Cape Town is so distinctly European that it's all too possible to forget its roots.
I have ingested marijuana four times in my life, and each time was so distinctly unpleasant that I will happily die without smoking weed again.
He had a way that enabled so distinctly mannered a person to chameleon himself to whatever he needed to be to win the adoration of all these different types of people.
The females and males of E. roratus are so distinctly different in appearance that in the original descriptions of the birds, they were classified as separate species.
The eulogy of Fabius Maximus comports so distinctly with Quattrocento humanism that some scholars have even dubbed it a "Renaissance fake".
Exerting pressure going forward, Rangers were so distinctly the more ambitious side that they restricted Hearts to a solitary break that carried even the slightest hint of a threat through the entire first half.
Indeed, so distinctly separate did Audley Harrison and Audley Harrisonn" appear that some even talked about a "dream fight" in which Audley Harrison took on "Audley Harrison" in a 12-round contest under the promotional tagline It's Id v Ego.
But that's why Facebook is so distinctly well-equipped.
I didn't care for the sloppy way "Stumpy" disappears without explanation after page two or that Max was so distinctly American – this is a world of "soccer" and "pop flies" – but Eggers does a fine job portraying the chaotic existence of a very young boy, as well as the innumerable stresses the rest of the world places on him without even thinking.
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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