Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(5)
The word "flaw" is correct and commonly used in written English
It refers to a mistake, defect, or imperfection in something. Example: The vase had a small flaw in its design, but it was still a beautiful piece of art.
Exact(60)
Gifted footballer though he is, the Frenchman has again demonstrated the fatal flaw in his temperament which eventually saw him quit league football in France after a series of run-ins with the authorities.
He said the crisis had exposed a flaw in international governance, with any one of the security council's five permanent members able to veto a decision.
Anne Treneman in the Times saw the launch as "a strange theatrical set piece" and pointed to a flaw in the central actor's performance.
Entertaining they may have been, especially to the neutral, but the major flaw in the system was that a team could finish in the last play-off place and be promoted at the expense of a club that had finished a significant distance ahead of them.
Her resignation is a reminder that so many of Cameron's problems, whether on policy or party management, flow from the same flaw.
Christopher Soghoian, a senior policy analyst studying technological surveillance at the American Civil Liberties Union, said the relationship between the tech giants and the NSA has a fundamental – and ironic – flaw that guarantees the Prism scandal is unlikely to be the last time tensions surface between the two.
Unfortunately, if he has a flaw, it's a weakness for a damsel in distress, and the more he comes round to Denton's point of view, the more I fear that she's pulling the wool over his eyes.
It was terrific, apart from one design flaw: hot air and kitchen smells rise into the upper bedroom level.
And in the tumult of the past year – whether from faith- and fear-based state laws that even our most backward southern neighbors won't enact, or the unrest and police violence in the streets of Ferguson – that character flaw was laid bare.
"That is a fundamental flaw as well because David Cameron had to prove that we would fail in government.
Superstorm Sandy damaged the building's $10.6m £6.8mm) clean-power sources – those world-class fuel cells – a third of which went unrepaired and unreplaced because of a costly flaw in the main tower's design and pressure to honour a billion-dollar deal with Condé Nast, the global publisher and the building's anchor tenant.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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