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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a few signposts" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a small number of indicators or markers that provide guidance or direction.
Example: "As we navigate through the project, I will provide a few signposts to help you stay on track."
Alternatives: "a couple of markers" or "some indicators".
Exact(8)
So let me suggest a few signposts for winning the peace.
Synthetic or metallic-looking materials, inflatable furniture, moon-boot footwear and alien-inspired hairstyles were just a few signposts of the spirit of the age.
In case the comparison isn't crystal clear, Lelchuk puts up a few signposts: he wrote a novel entitled "Miriam at Thirty-Four"; Danny has written one called "Helen at 34".
So, a little cheer for most of us and a few signposts to the spending restraint, tax cuts and good housekeeping that Cameron believes would characterise a future Conservative government.
To me this story is about the process of mythmaking, and I see quite a few signposts to that, such as "Did it happen this way?" and "that sort of story couldn't be believed by realists" and "I did not see anything that happened but I know, I tell you, I know it happened this way".
The London Olympics are certainly on the menu and the squad announced by coach Luis Milla on Tuesday pitched a few signposts to the future.
Similar(52)
Zach is less a fully conceived character than a shorthand version, held together by a tone of voice and a few signpost eccentricities.
The many travelers in his films are rootless men seeking self-knowledge and a way to live in a time that offers too few signposts.
Acedia's sufferers were engaged in solitary, sedentary, cerebral effort toward a clear final goal — but a goal that could be reached only by crossing an open, empty field with few signposts.
He's from the slam-bang school, quickly ticking off a few geographical signposts — there's the Esquiline Hill, and over there the Palatine — as he lets the characters' names, a great many of which end in the same two letters, bear the brunt of establishing a bygone era.
There are very few signposts.
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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