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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a long script of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to an extensive written document, such as a screenplay, code, or any lengthy text.
Example: "The director handed me a long script of the play to review before the auditions."
Alternatives: "an extensive script of" or "a lengthy script of".
Exact(1)
In a game in which, as one columnist put it, 'anyone who subscribes to National Geographic is considered an intellectual,' Bill was from Stanford, looked like a professor, worked from a long script of plays he invented, was indeed smarter than almost all of his contemporaries and spoke in complete sentences that were often about something other than the sports page".
Similar(59)
He's a true man of the theatre, and I suspect that Davila's film (which, according to Hée, is based on a hundred-and-thirty-five-page-long script of a noteworthy precision) is a notable showcase for his artistry.
During the editing of the episode, executive producer Greg Daniels publicly addressed NBC in an interview, stating, "I'd like to get a supersized episode, because it's a really long script with a lot of good stuff".
Mr. Robinson had another disappointing experience with film studios -- and stars -- when a long-planned script of his, "The Age of Aquarius," about a relief worker in Sarajevo, was scuttled by Universal when Harrison Ford dropped out of the project.
Ben Foster, on the other hand, comes from a long line of scripts about neurotic misfits, addicts and villains, but is too reserved for comfort as Treat, the live wire whose perpetual rage makes even his casual movements potential acts of violence.
However, the resulting 180-page long script was twice the length of a typical feature film script, and Knauf still felt that it was too short to do his story justice.
"My screenplay career is a long trail of scripts that were virtually unrecognizable to me when the movies came out," he said.
Here, Christie delivers essentially one long script (she recently performed about three pages of it as the warm-up act for Rob Delaney's show on the South Bank), and while the tone of most comedians' autobiographies is often very different to their on-stage person, Christie combines narrative and stream-of-consciousness brilliantly, both on page and stage.
"We had just come off a long year of reading scripts in which each female protagonist was more ill and rickety and pathetic and pathologically devastated than the last," Ms. Granik said.
He explained that he wrote the script over a long period of time, starting even while working on "There Will Be Blood," and that it was based mainly on the following elements: > First, this man who comes out of the war.
The newspaper industry, whose biggest titles have often claimed to speak for the nation, has been used as an allegory in a long print-run of scripts that includes Arnold Wesker's The Journalists (1972), Howard Brenton and David Hare's Pravda (1985), and Richard Bean's phone-hacking drama, Great Britain (2014).
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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