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The word "adjunct" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used as a noun or an adjective to describe something that is added or connected to something else but is not an essential part of it. Here are some examples of how to use the word "adjunct": - "The new computer program was created as an adjunct to the existing system, providing additional features for users." - "Music theory is often seen as an adjunct to the study of classical music, but it can be applied to many different genres." - "Sarah took on a part-time job as an adjunct professor at the university, teaching evening classes in creative writing." - "The use of technology has become an essential adjunct to modern education, helping to enhance learning and engagement for students." - "The company's marketing strategy included an adjunct campaign on social media, aiming to target younger demographics."
Dictionary
Adjunct
adjective
Connected in a subordinate function.
Exact(60)
Adjunct to these problems is the charge that the expectationalist can't explain why promissory expectations produce obligations, in a way that other expectations don't (cf. Raz 1972; Owens 2006).
Nesbitt, now an adjunct professor at Chicago's Columbia College, doesn't live in Lawndale anymore, though he goes back for frequent visits.
No mere adjunct to the main man, Tom Hollander, she is given plenty of meat to tuck into as she struggles with work ambitions, home life, parenthood and the various parishioners who use her home as an unofficial Citizens Advice Bureau.
They added: "Labour, until the final days of the Scottish campaign, seemed like an adjunct of the government no campaign".
Last week the department issued an appeal to would-be senders of those articles of use and fancy which have become an indispensible adjunct to the celebration of the 14th, requesting them to post their missives as early as possible, Saturday night being recommended as the most convenient time.
He will also take up a role as an adjunct professor at the University of New South Wales.
That, plus the offer of land by the airport, helped persuade the project's backers to put it there rather than in London or Amsterdam.Luxembourg's government views the freeport as a useful adjunct to its burgeoning financial centre, which has been built on tax-friendliness.
The adjunct to a 26,000-strong 26,000-strongcoalition America, the NATO force is composed of 9,000 soleders, from 35 nations.
Others go further, moaning that the IMF's Korean foray proves that it has become an adjunct of American foreign policy.The latter complaint is over the top, but not by a lot.
In theory, an invention needs to satisfy all three of these requirements to be considered patentable (though, shamefully, many software patents granted these days fail on all three counts).Such an invention machine could be a useful adjunct for enterprises seeking to create new drugs, devices, gizmos, materials or services.
At the moment environmental issues are treated as an adjunct to the World Trade Organisation.
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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