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The phrase "a lacuna" is correct and can be used in written English.
It means a gap or missing part in a text or argument. You can use this phrase in both formal and informal writing. Example: There is a lacuna in the witness's statement, as she failed to mention her whereabouts during the time of the crime. In this sentence, "a lacuna" is used to describe a missing piece of information in the witness's statement.
Exact(60)
A lacuna followed, a gap that remains.
That is, employing emphatic verbiage to hide a lacuna in the argument.
It's like a lacuna – you don't have any interest in the news or anything.
I seem to enjoy telling stories with a central absence, with a lacuna tunnelled into them.
It occupies a small chamber called a lacuna, which is contained in the calcified matrix of bone.
But his life in Chicago from 1991 until his victorious Senate campaign is a lacuna in his autobiography.
High detail in the audience fades to a lacuna where the frenzy of death is taking place.
Some strong works from the blue and pink periods and the thirties bracket a lacuna of Cubism.
Some strong works from the Blue and Pink periods and the thirties bracket a lacuna of Cubism.
In A Theory of Tort Liability, Allan Beever identifies a lacuna in modern tort theory and aims to fill it.
Yet, there is a lacuna in the study of the sector's response to new and contradictory environmental pressures.
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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