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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a chapter at a" is not complete and lacks context, making it unclear in written English.
It could be used in a context discussing the process of writing or reading chapters in a book or document.
Example: "As I work on my novel, I prefer to take it a chapter at a time to ensure quality."
Alternatives: "one chapter at a time" or "each chapter individually".
Exact(16)
It was in RAW that he initially published "Maus," a chapter at a time.
"I've been coming here to read Bill Simmons's 'Book of Basketball,' about a chapter at a time".
My introduction to it was by my fifth grade teacher, Mr. Jeness, who read it aloud to us in class, a chapter at a time.
Mr. Spielberg bought the rights to her book "Team of Rivals" even before she wrote it, and she sent him a chapter at a time.
McCrum has written an admirable work which I had to ration myself to a chapter at a time lest I finished it too quickly.
He started a new novel every January, writing six days a week, 12 hours a day until he finished in midsummer, delivering a chapter at a time to give his publisher in time to publish the book before Christmas.
Similar(44)
This is when the next chapter in the memoir isn't a chapter at all, but an afterword.
Sometimes 100 years pass in a chapter, at other times in a line break.
To stay fresh, he goes over about a chapter at home every day.
Charter for the establishment of a chapter at Iowa State College, 1925.
Global Brigades has a chapter at Columbia but is not affiliated with the university.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com