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The phrase "a group of inner" is not correct and lacks clarity in written English.
It may be intended to describe a specific subset of people or elements that are considered "inner," but it requires additional context to be meaningful.
Example: "The organization consists of a group of inner circle members who make the key decisions."
Alternatives: "a circle of insiders" or "a set of core members".
Exact(2)
Mr Harewood returned to Washwood Heath Technology College with the aim of transforming a group of inner city teenagers into Shakespearean actors.
Its interactions with a group of inner membrane-associated ABC transporters were confirmed by a bacterial two-hybrid analysis.
Similar(58)
The plans were approved by a group of inner-circle ministers in September 1985 ‑ five months after the strike ended.
Nine new prisons are to be built this year, housing 10,000 inmates and allowing the closure of a group of inner-city prisons, the government has announced.
But when Reuben visited last fall with a group of inner-city students, Mark Davies, the dean of admissions, told them that "typical" means just that.
Jackson, a 31-year classroom veteran, was teaching the mathematics of ratios to a group of inner-city seventh graders while 15 young teachers watched attentively.
"There's a group of inner-ring suburbs and satellite cities that have not participated in the prosperity," Mr. Katz said; rather, they have ended up bearing more of the burden with fewer of the rewards.
The concept came about by accident – a local charity needed an activity that would help a group of inner-city teenagers to get to know each other, build their confidence and improve their communication skills.
Last Friday, Mr. Lang was at it again, this time at the American Museum of Natural History, where a group of inner-city seventh graders were shouting aloud with him, "I will be a scientist".
After the war he made brilliant films on education, among them They Took Us to the Sea (1958), which followed a group of inner-city children from Birmingham on a trip to the seaside at Weston-super-Mare, and I Want to Go to School (1959), which focused on the relationship between schoolteacher and pupil.
It may be inspiring for a group of inner-city girls to be told by Michelle Obama that they need only believe in themselves and work hard to make it to Oxbridge, but this flies in the face of institutional realities stacked against the economically disadvantaged – particularly black, Pakistani and Bangladeshi Britons, who are under-represented in top universities.
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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