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The phrase "a notebook full of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a notebook that contains a large amount of written content, such as notes, sketches, or ideas.
Example: "She carried a notebook full of sketches and ideas for her next art project."
Alternatives: "a notebook filled with" or "a notebook packed with".
Exact(42)
A notebook full of scenes?
"I have a notebook full of drawings and ideas.
When she graduated, Wang left New Balance a notebook full of ideas gleaned from the survey.
He came back to Princeton with a notebook full of stories about the people he'd met.
Anclaudys took a notebook full of portraits and caricatures to the center.
Mr. Rushing, sporting an off-season beard, came prepared, carrying a notebook full of questions.
Similar(18)
But for me, "Dogs" looked like a notebook-full of sketches that could have easily served five dances, not just one.
I had many tire kickers right away, and by the following spring a new agent with a whole notebook full of new ideas for Hack.
Whatever happened to that?" There's a whole notebook full of ideas, but they're not implemented.
At that time she turned to a "secret notebook full of songs that she had been compiling since her early teens" to express herself as an artist.
This is the sort of off-kilter undertaking Doctorow has routinely relished: In his 2005 novel "The March," he re-creates Sherman's devastation of Georgia and the Carolinas less as epic history than a flood of personal apocalypses, while "City of God" is constructed as a writer's notebook, full of fragments so elliptical it takes nearly 50 pages to decode.
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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