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The phrase "a believe" is not correct in written English.
It seems to be a misuse of the word "believe," which is a verb, and should not be preceded by the article "a." An example of correct usage would be: "I believe in the power of education."
Alternatives: "a belief" or "an opinion."
Exact(23)
a)"Believe it or not, I don't like talking to journalists.
Ohio State holds a 7-0 lead over Toledo thanks to a — believe it or not — touchdown catch from the tight end Jake Stoneburner.
Matthew2012 06 March 2014 11 27am All economics is based upon a believe of what things are worth rather than an intrinsic value.
Urbandictionary.com defines a "kumbaya liberal" as "knee-jerk thinkers, politicians and other individuals of the far left who tend to (a) believe force is never an answer, (b) talk about problems, rather than do something about them" and so on.
By Geoffrey T. Hellman The New Yorker, September 7 , 1940 P. 27When Mr. Schuster of Simon & Schuster proposed to get out a "Believe It Or Not" book Ripley said that he was just a two-cent man.
The New Yorker, September 7 , 1940 P. 27When Mr. Schuster of Simon & Schuster proposed to get out a "Believe It Or Not" book Ripley said that he was just a two-cent man.
Similar(37)
An agent P representing a believed adversary.
A believed history is a set of exchange histories.
We are a believing nation.
A: I believe in stealing.
A:I believe in focus.
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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