Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(1)
The phrase "a paved square" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a flat, hard surface area that has been covered with paving materials, often found in public spaces or plazas.
Example: "The children played happily in the paved square, surrounded by benches and trees."
Alternatives: "a cobblestone plaza" or "a brick courtyard".
Exact(6)
He points mournfully to a paved square outside Morrisons: early in Cambourne's development, the parish council suggested it might be the ideal setting for a farmers' market, but Morrisons owns the space and would not oblige – claiming, Hume says, that the kind of produce that might be sold outdoors was already available on its premises.
Dozens of sleeping bags line the walls of a paved square, somewhere in the heart of Paris.
Immediately to the north of the Town Hall is a paved square known as Exchange Flags; this is surrounded on all sides by modern office buildings.
The Old Blockhouse comprises a paved, square gun platform, approximately 7 m by 6.5 m, with 1 m thick, low granite walls, which were probably somewhat taller when they were first built.
The cows were turned out on a paved square in front of the barn 2 h per day in accordance with the Swiss Animal Protection law.
The experiment was conducted between the end of November 2012 until early February 2013, because the animals spend most of the day indoors at this time of year (no grazing; 2 hours turnout per day on a paved square in front of the barn in accordance with requirements of the Federal Animal Welfare Act) and because the winter feeding is constant.
Similar(54)
I finally found "Heroes' Square," a sorry, ugly paved square with a church well described and marked in all the guidebooks.
Several thousand residents turned out in mid-July for a demonstration in the expensively paved square across the street from city hall, demanding that municipal officials revive the stalled economy.
He unfurls his sleeping bag and lies down in the empty, polished-to-perfection paved square that is festooned with historical soundbites.
Wide, paved squares flanked the palaces, and around them spread extensive towns, which by this time if not earlier seem to have been unwalled.
Communal areas such as paved squares are clearly marked to pass what Monchuck calls "the picnic test": "We could have a picnic here but not there," she says, pointing to a fenced-off front garden.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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