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Discover LudwigThe phrase "tough kind" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a type or category of something that is difficult or resilient in nature. Example: "She has a tough kind of determination that inspires everyone around her."
Exact(9)
She is also tough, kind and funny.
Alex had cropped hair and a tough kind of beauty.
The Olympics has been a real motivation for me, but it's just been tough, kind of bad timing with everything.
This polypore is a local conk — a thick, tough kind of polypore — but its name is proprietary information.
Tough, kind, hardworking + yes sometimes a #BloodyDifficultWoman but would be a top PM".
In this way, the anger and the elegy give way, by the book's end, to a tough kind of joy.
Similar(49)
Less encouragingly, she says telling punchline jokes is "probably the toughest kind of comedy to do.
Remote, mysterious and preternaturally lonely, Carter is the toughest kind of character for a writer to get a handle on.
"The Skin I Live In" follows the life of a renowned plastic surgeon (Antonio Banderas) and his quest to create a new, tougher kind of human skin.
The linking of Mr. Lehane and Mr. Schmidt in California is an alliance of consultants known for pressing some of the toughest kind of politics.
The agency had first slapped a so-called black box warning, the toughest kind, on the drugs in March as an interim measure.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com