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The word "typified" is correct and usable in written English
It is an adjective meaning to embody or exemplify a particular quality or idea, usually in an exaggerated or stereotypical way. For example, you might say, "Her lively personality typified the energy of her favorite city."
Exact(59)
Lincolnshire sausages are some of the most famous in England, typified by their deep sage flavour.
Cautious, crabby and a poor spectacle, it typified the way much of the tournament had gone.
It's a style typified by LAC (After Swan Lake), the full-length work the company bring to London this month.
Heavy on the ballad and the emotional lyric, typified by fiddles, guitars and harmonicas, country music has its roots deep in the Appalachian mountains from where it emerged in the 1920s, but its origins were also heavily influenced by traditional Celtic ballads from Scotland and Ireland, brought to the US by immigrants from Europe.
After defending dully but solidly Argentina were beaten by a penalty which typified the indifferent refereeing of the tournament as a whole and ended with nine men on the field after Edgardo Codesal had sent off Pedro Monzón, the first man ever to be dismissed in a World Cup final, and Gustavo Dezotti.
So the criminalisation of squatting, the attitudes of buy-to-let landlords (typified by the Daily Mail's offering last week of a buy-to-let property as a competition prize), the right to buy and the carving up of housing association stock constitute a national scandal.
But he was haunted by the Camden Town murder, a killing that, for him, typified the desperate lives of Edwardian London's most vulnerable people.
In fact, support for Farage's party has come from both the Tories and Labour and has been typified on both sides by economic anxiety.
Despite fleeing the country, almost all the culprits were eventually captured.For all its daring, in its cast of characters and casual violence the Great Train Robbery typified the organised crime that flourished in Britain in the 1960s and 1970s.
This "loyal opposition" seems almost afraid of power; witness, say critics, the curious collapse of its strong presidential campaign in 1994, and Mr Castillo's similar fate.No such fear troubles the neoPANistas typified by Mr Fox.
Similar(1)
Moreover, its thrumming bass, bongo drums and the very fact that it is a rumba in other words Caribbean and not from flamenco's true family of song forms typified the character of De Lucía's music, and that of thousands who tried to copy him.
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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