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The phrase "a stage of some" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to refer to a specific phase or level of something, but it lacks clarity and context.
Example: "We are currently in a stage of some development, but the details are still being finalized."
Alternatives: "a phase of some" or "a level of some".
Exact(1)
When did you make it up onto a stage of some sort?
Similar(59)
I met Gifford at the offices of his publisher prior to a staging of some of Writers plays at the New School, to talk writing, weirdness, and what it's like to go to a diner with David Lynch and Harry Dean Stanton.
Just over one third of the participants declined to express aspirations for longer life, some because they felt that their lives had reached a stage of completion and some as a form of fate acceptance.
By extension, "classic" is also sometimes used to refer to a stage of development that some historians and aestheticians have identified as a regular feature of what they have seen as the cyclical development of all styles.
Ms. Ralston appreciated the commiseration, a centerpiece of T.T.N.'s programming, which includes monthly peer groups, where eight to 10 women meet to discuss a stage of life that some sociologists compare to adolescence in its turmoil.
This was followed by a stage of crystal ripening, with some transformation of hematite to goethite (Supporting Information Table SI-1).
We've now reached a stage of environmental catastrophe so severe that some experts warn we're fast approaching the point of no return.
That's a stage of the thing.
Everyone has reached a stage of acceptance.
Was the plaza surrounding it a stage for some sort of sacrifice?
Again, this is a stage set of some sort?
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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