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The phrase "a kind of plan" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a type or category of plan that may not be fully defined or is somewhat vague.
Example: "We have developed a kind of plan to improve our marketing strategy, but we need more input from the team."
Alternatives: "a type of plan" or "a sort of plan".
Exact(3)
That is a kind of plan.
"There were many unfortunate things that happened … whether by ignorance or a kind of plan to take us, come hell or high water," he said.
This seat-of-the-pants solution to a last-minute problem was a fitting coda to the making of "Putty Hill," which itself originated as a kind of Plan B. In 2006 Mr. Porterfield completed his first film, "Hamilton," a quiet drama about a pair of young parents, set in a working-class suburb of Baltimore, near where he grew up and still lives.
Similar(57)
Once the site of a fountain that was supposed to entice motorists to the retail stores on nearby Grand Avenue, the Splash Pad, as it has long been known, existed for years as a kind of planning hiccup, an ugly, acre-and-a-half traffic island of concrete and palm trees.
But what is being gained much like the family of the bride that doesn't lose a daughter but gains a son is a kind of planning and architectural quality all but unknown to 20th‐century New York and unparalleled in other parts of the city.
As things stand, Britain will leave the European Union on Friday without either a withdrawal agreement or any kind of plan for future relations.
He would like to see a kind of Marshall plan to help host countries cope.
I start with a kind of unproductivity plan: keep growth slow and employment high.
As a kind of backup plan, she'd written "The Fairyland Around Us," a book version of her lectures.
We show how we can limit the search by preparing for replanning in non-critical situations, thereby constructing a kind of minimal plan.
In performance, her dancers use a "score," a kind of game plan, which calls upon this methodology, leaving their specific movements open to choice.
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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