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The phrase "across the page in a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing the placement or movement of something on a page, often in a visual or spatial context.
Example: "The text was arranged across the page in a way that drew the reader's attention."
Alternatives: "spanning the page in a" or "laid out across the page in a".
Exact(2)
In longhand, the hand moves freely across the page in a way no amount of computer jiggery-pokery can muster.
Meanwhile, muscles attached outside your eyes are working to keep both of them focused on the same point and are enabling your eyes to scan back and forth across the page in a coordinated manner.
Similar(58)
Having had the idea of updating the image, he came back with a page torn from a glossy magazine on which was the then-contentious advert for Opium perfume, in which Sophie Dahl's body lies prone across the page in an echo of the victim's body from the story.
Write the lists again across the top of the page, in a horizontal line this time.
Fine showed the article around, and the next day a printed copy came back to him, with "Fix This" scrawled across the page in Bezos's hand, and a budget of roughly a million dollars attached. (Amazon denies this).
He's discussing his disenchantment with the paragraph break and the full stop, expounding why the prose of his novels surges across the page in what his translator George Szirtes calls a "slow lava flow of narrative, a vast black river of type".
In Extinct Boids (sic), by Ralph Steadman and Ceri Levy (Bloomsbury), each species is splashed across the page in Steadman's unique style, accompanied by a witty and informative commentary by Levy.
He explains, "because the images are shown as part of a progression across the page in expanding scales, the reader intuitively grasps the way they build to form an animated series.
The aura of significance that surrounds the Titanic's fate was the subject of another, belated headline, which appeared in a special publication of the satirical newspaper the Onion, in 1999, stomping across the page in dire block letters: WORLD'S LARGEST METAPHOR HITS ICE-BERG The "news" was accompanied by an archival image of the ship's famous four-funnelled profile.
The entries move across the page in tiny but precise script.
She favored whisper-thin lines, at times zigzagging across the paper to form neurons, more often extending across the page in soft diagonals and transversals.
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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