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The phrase "a common facet of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a typical or shared aspect of a particular subject or phenomenon.
Example: "Communication is a common facet of successful teamwork."
Alternatives: "a typical aspect of" or "a frequent element of".
Exact(8)
In fact, misbalance between these neuronal types may be a common facet of heterogeneous syndromes like autism and schizophrenia8,9.
So-called sports massages have become a common facet of training for professional athletes of all kinds.
That's a common facet of the American experience — it is a strange and new place that is also the place that you know.
I wanted to speak with Turner because I've heard that delusions and paranoias like the ones Carole suffered are a common facet of the condition.
This recession has left a legacy of high youth unemployment, a common facet of most recessions affecting most countries.
Wherever we observe unusual human behavior, it's often useful to ask "why?" Spectator sports are such a common facet of our lives that we sometime fail to appreciate their ability to make us do highly unusual things — behaviors rarely observed outside the context of organized competition.
Similar(52)
Another common facet of conventional masculinity – an entitlement to exert dominance over others, and specifically, over women – is a key driver in another nationwide epidemic plaguing South Africa: gender-based violence (GBV) (14).
One increasingly common facet of prize designs is to support several teams through intermediate steps towards the solution.
Let (Gamma _{kl}) denote the common facet of (Omega _k) and (Omega _l), and note that (n_k{mid _{Gamma _{kl}}}=-n_l{mid _{Gamma _{kl}}}).
In what is by now another common facet of race-denying, Dunn shifts from claiming that he is not a racist to arguing that he is the victim of racism.
"Inappropriate social integration is a common, but neglected, facet of the majority of neuropsychiatric disorders," says neuroscientist Martien Kas of Utrecht University in the Netherlands, and coordinator of the new Psychiatric Ratings using Intermediate Stratified Markers (PRISM) project, funded by the European Innovative Medicines Initiative.
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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