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in-depth
[in-depth]
adjective
extensive, thorough, or profound.
an in-depth analysis of the problem.
well-balanced or fully developed.
in-depth
adjective
carefully worked out, detailed and thorough
an in-depth study
Word History and Origins
Origin of in-depth1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
Wolfson writes for KFF Health News, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
Having just read the latest in-depth interview with Silicon Valley guru Curtis Yarvin in the New Yorker, I felt a little bit off balance watching this "Mountainhead" broligarch fan-fic satire because it's obviously not a total fantasy.
Boro's hierarchy had let it be known they would be conducting an in-depth review into the reasons a season where promotion had been targeted and budgeted for ended in a failure to reach the play-offs despite an unusually low points total – the lowest for a decade - being required to make them.
In a series of in-depth interviews for documentary Mary Earps: Queen of Stops, Earps and her family open up about that journey to the top of her sport – and some of the big decisions en route.
It's difficult to put a number on such businesses, as there has never been an in-depth study.
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