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The word "mandate" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to describe an official order or a duty assigned to a person or group. For example, "The president's mandate is to improve the government's response to climate change."
Dictionary
Mandate
noun
An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept.
Exact(44)
It is essentially clear that the four more liberal members of the Court will vote in favor of the mandate.
We are halfway through the mandate argument; the SG is done.
Mandate is in trouble.
Now the Harlow MP's mandate will reach beyond policy to inform the way Tory candidates are selected, with an emphasis on diversity of class as much as ethnicity, and the way new supporters are signed up and engaged.
She'd been frozen out of the ruling party, and Mutharika had tried to fire her several times, but she'd clung on for dear life to her constitutional mandate.
We have a mandate for a sustainable solution within the eurozone Yannis Dragasakis Athens is in a race against the clock to unlock €7.2bn (£5.3bn) in rescue loans the EU and IMF have refused to disburse until the government delivers a convincing package of reforms.
Similar(16)
Baird said the election victory had handed the Coalition a mandate to "make NSW great" and blamed the seat losses on a scare campaign by Labor, vowing to win them back at the next election.
In a time of collapsing public confidence in the political classes across Europe, Orbán can claim to be unique – a gifted, popular strongman with the most formidable electoral mandate in the EU.
Related: Lynton Crosby: the man who really won the election for the Tories The British prime minister, David Cameron, spent Friday evening reshaping his government after winning a sensational second five-year mandate for his Conservative party in a general election result that confounded pollsters and pundits – and shattered the centrist Liberal Democrats, his junior coalition partners since 2010.
We intervened in Libya alongside a broad coalition, and with the mandate of the UN security council, because we had the ability to stop the slaughter of innocents; and because we believed that the aspirations of the people were more powerful than a tyrant.
"It emerged that there was a risk that because of financial pressures in the NHS that it wouldn't happen under the coalition, even though we'd committed to it in the Department of Health's mandate to NHS England.
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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