Dictionary
Notion
noun
Mental apprehension of whatever may be known, thought, or imagined; idea, concept.
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The word "notion" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to an idea, belief, or concept that someone has, often without any strong evidence or proof. One can use "notion" in a sentence to express a belief or understanding, for example: - Her notion of success was based on material wealth and social status. - It is a common notion that hard work leads to success, but that is not always the case. - I have a notion that the restaurant down the street serves the best pizza in town. - The notion of time as a linear concept is a Western construct. - Despite his initial doubts, he eventually came around to the notion that change was necessary.
Exact(60)
But another cost has been the damage done to the whole notion of financial innovation.
This is the notion that openness is a certain good, and that "free" is automatically aligned with "freedom" – a faith that's hard to maintain in the light of the consequences of putting so much of our identities into the hands of third (and fourth, and fifth) parties.
All that is to say, I am sympathetic to the notion that I may need to handle a gun some day.
I understand why the Lib Dems feel the imperative to challenge the notion that they are compliant accomplices marching to Conservative tunes.
There are no values that I can espouse as a humanist that are anti-female, but there are a number of values of feminism that are alien to me – such as the notion that equality is more important than opportunity and choice, and that it can be legislated.
The murder of Shae challenges that notion – and Tyrion himself is aware of that fact.
"It is surprising that individuals at an institution of higher learning claiming to embrace the notion of academic and intellectual freedom would display intolerance and shout down a voice in the debate they simply don't agree with," Pyne said through a spokesman.
To Polish ears, the notion sounded like blasphemy.
A third principle riding atop these is transparency: the notion that government should be transparent by default and secret by necessity (and there are necessary secrets).
From the 18th century onwards, there was the notion of "proper" English, an idea that expressed itself in pedantry about grammar and pronunciation but that was always about power and control.
I had only a vague first-world notion of "deforestation" and this being bad.
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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