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The phrase "a printed booklet" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a physical booklet that has been printed, often containing information or instructions.
Example: "The conference provided a printed booklet with all the schedules and speaker information for attendees."
Alternatives: "a physical brochure" or "a hardcopy pamphlet".
Exact(11)
Preminger is now reading a printed booklet.
At the end of the session, Editor McConkey will admit that he was wrong before handing out a printed booklet of "Dude and Blackie's Plan to Destroy the World" to each pupil.
The aim of this study is to investigate the the effectiveness of psycho-educational intervention delivered via a printed booklet on people diagnosed with Schizophrenia and their primary caregivers' outcomes.
Participants in this group will be provided with a printed booklet with information about exercise, and in the second 6-month period cycling (non impact) exercise sessions will be undertaken twice a week.
The main aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of a psycho-educational intervention delivered via a printed booklet with regard to PDwS and primary caregiver's outcomes.
The methods of delivering psycho-educational interventions in studies for PDwS and primary caregivers include lectures [ 9, 12, 20- 22], face to face methods, supported with a printed booklet [ 12, 15] and online education [ 22].
Similar(49)
One brochure is a color printed booklet with a color photograph of Jargon Society staff.
So about 350 people gathered over salad and chicken breasts in a rooftop ballroom of the Holiday Inn in Emeryville, just across the bay from San Francisco, courtesy of Mr. Checchi, to hear the multimillionaire businessman sketch out his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for governor, brandishing a newly printed booklet called the Checchi Plan.
A recent, privately printed booklet of his celebrates the Gasparilla Inn, a semi-historic Gulf Coast resort hotel known mostly to the comfortably well-to-do.
Introduced into the feverish atmosphere of the Sanatorium Berghof by tubercular rake Herr Albin, this "badly printed booklet" causes a minor sensation and quickly becomes the must-read book amongst the bedridden romantics.
The icon I use to indicate this subsite is part of the drawing on the cover of the printed booklet; it doesn't seem to be a historical depiction of the fort, but rather a modern drawing in the style of the sketch by Bugler Moellman on p15.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com