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"three-dimensional character" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to refer to a character in a story or other work of fiction that has been realistically developed with a sense of depth and complexity. For example, "The hero in the novel was a vibrant and three-dimensional character."
Exact(59)
Billy is probably the most plausible stab at a three-dimensional character.
It completely takes away the ability to make a three-dimensional character.
GEORGE: Geoff Johns has turned Sinestro, Green Lantern's former enemy, into a three-dimensional character.
"I mean, can I really create a full, three-dimensional character?
You create a three-dimensional character who has a life and a history, and that's done very slowly.
Whenever the sole three-dimensional character, Dagmar, takes the stage, the story threatens to come alive with a whoosh.
Once a three-dimensional character deserving of empathy, by the end Gunnar just seems like a puppet.
"So-called character actors usually have supporting roles, which means that you have less colours on the palette to paint a three-dimensional character.
"Ed McMahon made Tonto look like a three-dimensional character," said Robert J. Thompson, professor of film and television at Syracuse University.
Thomas Cooley, a tenor, developed Jephtha as a gripping three-dimensional character, and Susanna Phillips, a soprano, shone as his daughter.
Similar(1)
The technique introduces the three dimensional character of a graph in the form of a molecular geometry matrix, which can be manipulated to provide several useful descriptors.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com