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The phrase "a phrase that started" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to the beginning of a specific phrase or expression in a discussion or analysis.
Example: "The phrase that started the movement was 'We are all in this together.'"
Alternatives: "a phrase that originated" or "a phrase that began".
Exact(1)
Over the past couple of months, content marketing is a phrase that started to appear.
Similar(59)
As a searcher types a keyword phrase that starts out mature and gradually gets adult, the searcher might be enticed enough by a site showing up in the progressive results that has mature, but not adult, content.
" Any phrase that starts that way and continues with the word "but" is likely to upset the person rather than add value.
One of the most common phrases that started or ended a journal entry was, " I hope tomorrow is better".
I solved this puzzle by Daniel Landman (who appears to be making a debut) from the outside in, noting the theme entries of two-word phrases that started with S and I. It's an enjoyable solve, perfectly pleasant for a Monday, with a payoff that seems a bit Wednesdayish to me.
"I believe that's a phrase that I started years ago on the BOB GRANT show.
Second, it marked the conclusive arrival in the Brexit argument of a phrase that will soon start to haunt Mrs May unless and until she can deliver on it.
This partition consists of the part of ICD-10 that was separated from the main part because the Swedish rubrics mostly start with a phrase that does not exist in the English rubrics.
"I just started shooting" is a phrase that shows up a lot in Les Blank interviews.
"We're not starting from zero," Dashti said, using a phrase that has entered the vernacular here.
Not a phrase that inspired comfort.
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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