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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a brief about" is not standard in written English; it would be more appropriate to say "a brief on" or "a brief regarding." You can use it when you want to introduce a summary or overview of a topic, but it's better to use the correct alternatives
Example: "I would like to provide a brief on the recent changes in company policy."
Exact(9)
"They won 20 in a row, qualified for the playoffs, went two up on the Yankees, and there wasn't anything in the movie except a brief about Miguel and Eric, the three starters, Billy Koch.
Mr. Workman's lawyers have until April 17 to file a brief about a recently discovered X-ray that they believe is exculpatory and about the recanted testimony of a man who swore at the trial that he saw Mr. Workman fire the fatal shot.
The invitation message was written in English and Arabic and included a brief about the research objectives.
Two versions of an instructional video were developed that presented a brief (about 5 min) lecture on the conceptual background of ANOVA.
This paper contains a number of chapters as follows: a brief about ceramics family, a short history of glass, a brief about physics and the technology of glass fabrication, recently developed glasses with special destinations, testing methods and news about glass parts processing (grinding, waterjet processing, laser cutting, nanoimprint lithography, etc).
The Electronic Frontier Foundation also submitted a brief about the ruling under review, which states that, "the patent system is supposed to offer fair reward for inventors, not excessive, unfair compensation that threatens our access to technology".
Similar(50)
Unnervingly, it includes a briefing about parachutes.
"We gave Momix a briefing about what our intentions were.
Labor representatives received a briefing about the privatisation from officials from the Department of Finance on Wednesday.
The day after Connor died, they circulated a briefing about my blog," Sara says.
Mr. Powell was there yesterday for a briefing about his resignation.
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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