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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a minion" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a subordinate or follower, often in a humorous or informal context.
Example: "In the movie, the villain had a loyal minion who carried out all his orders without question."
Alternatives: "a lackey" or "a henchman".
Exact(59)
The data volumes used are modest: 898,420 MiSeq reads is approximately 8%% of a MiSeq V2 run, and 7300 MinION reads is approximately 20%% of a MinION run.
"I'll be a minion.
A minion appears.
A Minion wearing a tweed flat cap.
She referred to an Apple executive as a "minion".
We finally won a Minion or three haha".
A minion finally pipes up: "But dogs don't like it".
Eliza's verdict: "He looks really cute, a bit like a Minion and a blueberry mixed together.
In a rage the Minister stormed off and got a minion to wipe it up.
In Beaulieu's view, Jean is simply a minion of Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's.
Similar(1)
Mega Bloks Build-A-Minion: £37.49, amazon.co.uk Fans of Despicable Me's Minions, rejoice.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com