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The phrase "a echelon" is not correct in written English; it should be "an echelon." You can use it when referring to a level or rank in an organization or system.
Example: "The company has several echelons of management, each with distinct responsibilities."
Alternatives: "a level" or "a rank."
Exact(2)
'A' echelon arrived at Lejjun at 21 00 on 20 September.
3 RAR was subsequently left exposed, with the forward Chinese elements moving to within 1200 m of the battalion's A Echelon area.
Similar(57)
Hunter points out that Juramaia possesses a well-developed arrangement of teeth called an "echelon shear" that confirms it as an early eutherian.
She incites fascination with a captivating charisma that places her on an echelon above her peers.
Fail to get on the back of an echelon, and you can soon lose chunks of time in a lonely battle against the breeze.
But no one knows what an echelon is.
Those of the first variety are flat-floored and relatively straight; they are occasionally associated with crater chains and sometimes arranged in an echelon pattern.
I did unexpectedly find myself inducted into an echelon of customers that the restaurant's reservation book terms PX's (interior code for V.I.P.'s).
Now Facebook has created an echelon above Likes.
Some of these anticlines show an echelon offsets (Fig. 2).
Echelon - One for purists (and Belgians) this, an echelon is the formation that riders take up when there are crosswinds.
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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