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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a newbie" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to someone who is new to a particular activity, field, or community.
Example: "As a newbie in the coding world, I found the online tutorials incredibly helpful."
Alternatives: "a beginner" or "a novice".
Exact(59)
Powell is hardly a newbie.
@sarahk11 A newbie to Bon Iver.
quite a newbie in the field.
Nonetheless he still had the jitters of a newbie.
I'm not a newbie right out of college.
Subject: Re: Modem File Transfers - a newbie question.
Author Bio: Sophia is a newbie online ESL/EFL instructor.
Bio: Sophia is a newbie online ESL/EFL instructor.
"I was a kid, a newbie," she told me.
For a newbie, the number is more like eight.
Similar(1)
The balance in laboratory science is delicate, and nobody wants you--a newbie--showing them up.
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