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The phrase "a program to provide" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing the purpose or function of a program, typically in contexts related to services, software, or initiatives.
Example: "The organization launched a program to provide support for underprivileged children in the community."
Alternatives: "an initiative to offer" or "a scheme to deliver".
Exact(60)
Suez, he said, supports a program to provide 1,500 pumps to the area.
Last year, the company ended a program to provide all employees with computers and Internet access.
Mr. Bush has proposed such a program, to provide "an immediate helping hand" to the elderly.
Kelly Services, the temporary employment agency, recently began a program to provide substitute teachers to school districts.
Florida has pioneered a program to provide private-school vouchers for students in poorly performing public schools.
Last year, the council started a program to provide individualized college counseling to seriously injured veterans at military hospitals.
Tabaré Vázquez culminated with the successful implementation of a program to provide laptop computers to all primary schoolchildren in Uruguay.
It was unclear whether O'Neal, who is heavily involved in charities, including a program to provide computers to inner-city children, had donated money to L.S.U.
Last year that inequity inspired Eugenie Lang, a Scarsdale native, to start Get Ready, a program to provide free college counseling to students in Mount Vernon.
She learned to perform massage therapy on him, and ultimately began a program to provide massages to AIDS patients in Sacramento, which is near U.C. Davis.
It includes $200 million to continue a program to provide prekindergarten classes to all 4-year-olds and to reduce class sizes in the early grades.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com