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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a factsheet about" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when introducing a document or resource that provides information on a specific topic or subject matter.
Example: "The organization has created a factsheet about the benefits of recycling to educate the community."
Alternatives: "an information sheet on" or "a data sheet regarding".
Exact(2)
Over the past several days, it has distributed a factsheet about what it considers the problematic aspects of the FBI's resurgent role in domestic intelligence, and raised questions about Comey's role during the Bush administration in indefinite detention and torture – questions that have gotten far less attention than Comey's stand at the hospital.
If not, a factsheet about the particular symptom/activity based on data from multiple sources was provided.
Similar(58)
It was a British Library factsheet about Britain's constitution.
But despite growing warnings from Jobs & Money as well as consumer organisations, it was not until November 2002 that the FSA issued a factsheet with warnings about the risk to savings.
A factsheet is included about the harmfulness of nicotine products compared to cigarettes, and possible adverse effects that can be experienced when using these products, and what to do if these occur.
It has prompted Ms Griffiths to send an open letter to farmers, along with a "myth-busting" factsheet about the replacement proposals.
It offers a factsheet on how to make a complaint about PPI.
Similarly, Alexander conceded inaccuracies to Wyden in a factsheet published by the NSA to reassure Americans about restrictions on the monitoring of online behavior and communications it believes comes from foreigners outside America.
Senators Ron Wyden (Democrat, Oregon) and Mark Udall (Democrat, Colorado) wrote to General Keith Alexander, the director of the NSA, to correct "inaccurate" portrayals about restrictions on surveillance published in a factsheet available on the NSA's homepage.
But since then, Wyden and Udall have won a rare public victory in their struggles with the NSA: they persuaded Alexander to take down a factsheet on the NSA's website reiterating the same line about "promptly destroy[ing]" Americans' communications that aren't relevant to foreign intelligence or a crime.
One question about personnel shortages in special education included six sentences that match verbatim language from a factsheet published by the National Coalition on Personnel Shortages in Special Education and Related Services.
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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