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The phrase "stoic face" is correct and usable in written English.
You could use it to describe someone who is unemotional or shows no outward signs of emotion. For example: "He greeted the bad news with a stoic face, refusing to show any signs of distress."
Exact(32)
Just don't expect to see it on his stoic face.
Scioscia put on a stoic face for his players.
Ms. Hilton's jaw dropped slightly, her usually stoic face registering maybe a half-second of shock.
With a stoic face, he replied, "They didn't throw it my way".
"I can't believe I'm in a championship game," he said, letting a smile crack his usually stoic face.
Perhaps more unnerving than the landscape was the driver's stoic face -- absent of all affect, tensed by something unnameably sad.
Similar(25)
It was a day for stoic faces and grim resolve, for waterproofed jackets and long tights, but there was no escaping the cold and wet.
The Australian rapper looks like she's wearing an "Indian woman" Halloween costume in the jarring video that splices shots of a raucous party and an outdoor puja with the stoic faces of Indian men and children.
In late autumn, while winding through the streets of the Plaka, we decided to dress up like goddesses for Halloween and pose in front of the Parthenon, mimicking the stoic faces of the statues we were studying.
From their stoic faces, it's hard to tell they are rocketing through the air at 50 miles per hour.
A quick pan to the left revealed the stoic faces of the male Pakistani spectators, none looking overly thrilled to be there.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com