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The phrase "a chapter of accidents" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a series of unfortunate events or mishaps that occur in a particular situation or context.
Example: "The project turned into a chapter of accidents, with delays and miscommunications at every turn."
Alternatives: "a series of misfortunes" or "a string of mishaps".
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A Washington Post poll last year showed that 77% of voters would consider voting for an independent.By a chapter of accidents the Republicans have ended up with their one presidential candidate ideally suited to attracting independents.
There is nothing to suggest that this trend has been interrupted.In this section A chapter of accidents An unruly bunch ReprintsThe Catholicism being practised might, however, be considered by the Vatican to be of the wrong kind.
The Welsh lineout was sound enough but the scrum was consistently penalised and though Halfpenny pulled his side level with a 23-metre penalty, a chapter of accidents allowed Italy to reclaim the lead before the interval.
Those "cock-ups", the offspring of human frailty, self-doubt and self-deception, thread through Le Carré's narrative of the Cold War as a chapter of accidents as much as a battle of ideologies.
A chapter of accidents which gave the spectators thrills marked the start of the balloon race held in connection with the annual fête of the Stella women's aero club, from the balloon park of the Aéro-Club de France, at Saint-Cloud, yesterday [June 25] afternoon.
Similar(55)
It was just a complete chapter of accidents.
A macabre chapter of accidents was the result, and for years there were bids for a skull here, a rib there: something that Paine with his detestation of relics and cults would have deplored.
This chapter of accidents is just intensely comical.
The chapter of accidents was begun by M. Barra, piloting the Paulhan-Curtisa machine.
Cone of Silence was made into a film in 1960, and Beaty also recounted the story of the Comet's takeoff accidents in a chapter of his 1984 non-fiction work, Strange Encounters: Mysteries of the Air.
- Charles F. Adams, Jr., A Chapter of Erie (1871).
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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