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Discover LudwigThe phrase "appropriately authorised" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used when referring to someone or something that has received the proper permission or approval to act or perform a task. Example: "Only those who are appropriately authorised can access the confidential files."
Exact(10)
"The deployment was appropriately authorised and managed by senior officers.
But the use of force by police against demonstrators and bystanders must always be appropriately authorised and be the absolute minimum necessary - as the Tamil protest in Westminster yesterday again underlined.
Rather, it reflects that due to rapid changes in technology and the communications environment since the Investigatory Powers Act was taken through Parliament, a higher proportion of that activity would be more appropriately authorised under the bulk equipment interference regime, which includes additional controls and safeguards.
In April 1991, the coding community was alerted to a clause in the post-Gulf war anti-terrorism Senate bill 266, that allowed the government to obtain "the plain text contents" of voice, data, and other communications "when appropriately authorised by law".
The PUMA initiative aims to ensure that medicines used to treat children are subject to high-quality, ethical research and are appropriately authorised without subjecting the paediatric population to unnecessary clinical trials [15].
General objectives are to: increase the development of medicinal products for use in children, ensure that medicinal products used to treat children are subject to high quality research, ensure that medicinal products used to treat children are appropriately authorised for use in children, improve the information available on the use of medicinal products in children.
Similar(50)
"These measures strengthen existing controls to ensure airport workers are authorised, properly identified and appropriately trained before entering secure airside areas," Transport Minister Darren Chester said.
Who authorised it?
Not authorised.
A word not well authorised.
And who authorised its publication?
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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