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The phrase "a script to submit" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a written document or code that is intended to be sent or presented for approval or execution.
Example: "Please prepare a script to submit for the upcoming presentation to ensure all key points are covered."
Alternatives: "a document to submit" or "a file to submit".
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Suzanne Schiffman said, "He usually had a script to submit to the backer, but he didn't care about it, because he wasn't going to follow the script.
Well, for those hard core users of both services, Real-ity.com has created something of a mashup (you will need a last.fm account to use this) – a clone of the Pandora player running on their server, with a script to submit any track directly to your last.fm account for later tagging, etc.
Similar(58)
Click the Back button, input the following scripts: on (release) { gotoAndStop(1); jg = ""; } Add scripts to Submit button.
Before Tracker, a writer's agent could submit a script to a producer in secret, and with a short response deadline, to try to force a large bid.
In the early 50s, along with Elia Kazan, who had directed All My Sons and Death of a Salesman, I submitted a script to Harry Cohn, head of Columbia Pictures.
Mr. West had been a standup comedian and had appeared in Broadway shows before he and a partner, Mickey Ross, submitted a script to Norman Lear for his groundbreaking series "All in the Family" in 1971.
Morrissey, who submitted a script to Coronation Street before he found fame in The Smiths (it was rejected) was also once offered a cameo on Friends in the US.
Submitting a script to a committee that's looking to satisfy some established norm of artistic merit or so-called "quality" (a loaded term in the history of French cinema) is no less of a hurdle, or even a constraint, than trying to persuade a producer of a project's commercial potential.
Cartier became involved in the film industry in 1929, when he successfully submitted a script to a company based in Berlin, Germany.
But I kept writing, taping notecards on a wall for a script I planned to submit to the Sundance Screenwriters Lab.
I suspect it's either an overly literalist lawyer ("This game involves placing blocks in a row! The Bricklayers Local 104 in Oakland will sue us for using scab labor!") or an overly literalist programmer has written a Perl script to scan submitted code for things she considers no-nos.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com