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The phrase "utterly artificial" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is completely not natural or fabricated, often in contexts discussing art, intelligence, or products. Example: "The landscape in the movie was utterly artificial, lacking any sense of realism."
Exact(10)
Utterly artificial.
In one sense, it is an utterly artificial experience.
There is a curious frozen Madame Tussaud feel about the utterly artificial scene.
This is utterly artificial, and completely at odds with the way science is actually done these days.
But there's another exquisitely tender scene which, despite being utterly artificial, is equally illuminating on the subject of love.
When Celmins returned to painting, she treated images as she had the stones, rendering them in ways that are both meticulously faithful and utterly artificial.
Similar(49)
And I think it was uniquely appropriate to film, which is invariably a synthesis of artificial language and something utterly emotional and real.
It's filled with "ums" and "likes" and completely devoid of any intentional drama or artificial embellishment, but it is utterly moving in a way not unlike "Our Town" and causes you to look back on your own life.
The ATAA distribution with respect to nucleosomal potential values was utterly different between biological and non-biological (artificial) sequences for both insects.
Today, despite its cutting-edge research on life extension, artificial intelligence and space travel, Google is utterly reliant on advertising dollars.
With such a stressful presidential election looming ahead, the last thing many of us require is an artificial jolt of terror ― and it's not utterly without consequence politically, either.
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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