Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "a single fabric" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is unified or made of one material, often in a metaphorical sense to indicate cohesion or integration.
Example: "The community is woven together like a single fabric, each individual contributing to the strength of the whole."
Alternatives: "a unified fabric" or "one cohesive fabric".
Exact(11)
The truth is that racial realities are complicated, weaving all these factors into a single fabric.
They got us used to the idea that a single fabric can be all things to all people.
He showed how selection united the nonliving and the living, the nonhuman and the human, and the physical and the mental into a single fabric of intelligible material causation.
When a needle and thread I'd held onto for years both broke while repairing a torn seam in my favorite work skirt, I learned that there was no longer a single fabric store within 10 miles of my house.
In constructing the quilt top the pieced blocks may be stitched together, alternated with blocks cut from a single fabric, or separated by long strips of fabric known as sashing.
As ever, with a single fabric promotion, there is wonder and excitement at what can be created from a single sheep — but not much encouragement to weave wool in with other fabrics.
Similar(47)
The Unified Data Center unites computing, networking, storage, management, and virtualization into a single, fabric-based platform designed to increase and simplify operating efficiencies and provide business agility.
Marjorie Hilton, an interior designer with a large Upper East Side clientele, said that certain clients had driven her crazy when they asked for a room to be decorated in robin's egg blue, because "every single fabric house at the D&D Building has a different interpretation of the color; it ranges from a pale light blue to a pale aqua to Tiffany box".
So what happens when all the books in the world become a single liquid fabric of interconnected words and ideas?
Last year, Kevin Kelly, the self-styled "senior maverick" of Wired, predicted, in a piece in the Times, that "all the books in the world" would "become a single liquid fabric of interconnected words and ideas".
The underlying issue, though, is whether the ultimate manifestation of "digitized knowledge" — all the world's books becoming, as Kevin Kelly of Wired put it, "a single liquid fabric of interconnected words and ideas" — might be a facile and dangerous corruption of the intellectual process.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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