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The phrase "VIP" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a "Very Important Person," often in contexts related to special treatment or privileges. Example: "The event will feature a VIP section for guests who have purchased premium tickets."
Dictionary
VIP
noun
Very important person.
Exact(60)
Given the traffic on our roads and given the way our [public] places are crowded, it's a very difficult thing to handle VIP security – but still it's being handled right.
HZ: "We see policemen being used for VIP security and trying to clear the entire road for the entourage to pass.
There is no VIP room in reality, and there is no reality in this city.
Apart from a tiny block of obligatory VIP seats, top ticket prices at the Grimaldi Forum (the principality's main theatre) are pegged at €35, and the cheapest are very cheap.
I have sat on tour buses with bands deciding whether they should flog their own VIP festival tickets for drug money, and the vibe has felt eminently reasonable compared to that of three poets and their factions competing for a prize and a publishing deal.
These have included invitations to review a live X Factor show as a VIP and be an extra in a London-based film".
The casino industry in Macau has for decades used what are known as "junket operators" to bring in high rollers from other parts of China who gambled in "VIP rooms" in return for a substantial cut of the take.
One particularly Russian detail is the large VIP box (known as the Tsar's Box) installed at the centre of the horseshoe auditorium.
A STORY claiming that airlines have created a new, hidden level of "truly VIP" service for celebrities and high-powered CEOs caused a bit of a stir in the business-travel world last week.
This is not because I am a VIP.
Spain's pair were sped through the VIP section of Madrid airport on their way to the city's zoo.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com