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Discover LudwigThe phrase "very coarse" is correct and often used in written English.
It is typically used to describe something that is rough, rough-textured, or lacking refinement or delicacy. Example: The sandpaper on the wood was very coarse, making it difficult to smooth out the rough edges.
Exact(60)
Keep the crumbs very, very coarse.
And look for very, very coarse sandpaper.
Many of them were very coarse and vulgar and assertive.
Pilafs are made with medium, coarse or very coarse bulgur.
Very coarse crystals (those larger than 3 centimetres, or 1.2 inches) are termed pegmatitic.
A very coarse surface might be revealed by quite a thick weight of paper, for example.
The very coarse racism of my childhood in Vryburg is my understanding of apartheid.
"On a very coarse level it's a clown show," Mr. Shepard explained.
Lower unit A is a coarse gravel fining landward (from very coarse to medium pebbles, in a very coarse sand matrix), with rare pumice clasts, and particularly rich in fragments of bivalve shells.
Considerable attention has been given to deltas that are composed of very coarse deposits those of sand and gravel.
The one-and-a-half-pound mill has a notably wide grinding range, from very fine to very coarse.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com