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The phrase "accepted for service" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where something has been approved or authorized to begin providing a service.
Example: "The application was reviewed and accepted for service, allowing the new software to be implemented in the system."
Alternatives: "approved for service" or "authorized for service".
Exact(7)
Fussell cited a newspaper story about a London man who killed himself out of concern that he might not be accepted for service in the Great War, and noted, "How can we forbear condescending to the eager lines at the recruiting stations or smiling at news like this".
If y* ≥ α, where α is a predefined threshold value in the range from 0 to 1, then the new call is accepted for service and the best available channel, determined using the channel assignment criteria, is assigned to it.
Of the seven designs tendered to F7/30, the Gloster Gladiator biplane was accepted for service.
In 1970, the radars at Olenegorsk and Skrunda, and an associated command centre at Solnechnogorsk, were accepted for service.
The Dnestr radars were accepted for service by the Soviet Air Defence Forces in April 1967 and became part of the space surveillance network SKKP.
On 1 February 1959, Triton was provisionally accepted for service in the U.S. Navy, with Captain Beach, the Prospective Commanding Officer (PCO), now designated as Officer-in-Charge.
Similar(50)
She finally obtained the necessary records, and Mr. Branch was accepted for services in March by New York's Office for People with Developmental Disabilities.
Alas, as a 15-year-old he was struck by rheumatic fever, which meant that he was bedridden for 15 months, and against his will, and to his lifelong but needless embarrassment, was not accepted for military service.
One file said that Climbié's case was "accepted for ongoing service", whilst another computer record, made after Climbié's death, said that "no further action" was to be taken, suggesting the possibility that records may have been changed.
He had also tried to enlist in the U.S. Army following the country's entry into World War I, but Army doctors revealed that he had varicose veins, and he was not accepted for military service.
A minority of those accepted for pre-service training were drawn from the host university's undergraduate and postgraduate science courses.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com