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The phrase "a screen on which" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a surface or device that displays images, videos, or information.
Example: "The presentation was displayed on a screen on which the audience could easily see the graphics."
Alternatives: "a display that shows" or "a monitor where".
Exact(32)
There are even cinematic effects: at one point, a lacy square becomes a screen on which we see a cautionary tale about the dangers of the green woods.
It was one of 16 buttons on the phone, which also had a screen on which I could not, regrettably, watch something intellectual, like baseball or the Three Stooges.
"She is a screen on which so many of society's problems are projected.
On stage was a screen on which images of iconic women flashed by.
The auctioneer, standing before a screen on which a photo of the table appeared, opened the bidding at $14,000.
"A painting is like a screen on which a world of emotional anxieties are projected," he said.
Similar(26)
"In the Wire" opens with a projection of a computer screen on which an office worker named Mary is writing -- and rewriting -- a message to a colleague.
There are ones that have a screen on them, which is nice if it is Summer and there are a lot of bugs.
We even see part of the original brick wall where the massacre took place, pockmarked by circled bullet holes; it serves as an eerie screen on which one of the museum's many short films, "Bootleg Wars," is projected.
It was rumoured that they had built a "tablet" – a portable screen on which people could read newspapers.
The other is on a television screen, on which a video shows a continuous procession of men feasting in the courtyard of a large white house.
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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