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The phrase "arranged matches" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where matches (such as games or competitions) have been organized or scheduled in advance.
Example: "The tournament will feature several arranged matches between top players from around the world."
Alternatives: "scheduled matches" or "organized matches".
Exact(5)
The bride often arrived as little more than a skivvy; arranged matches with strangers could leave her especially unprotected.
United have already confirmed they will face Yokohama F Marinos on July 23, and have also arranged matches in Sydney and Hong Kong as part of their summer tour.
If you thought the internet industry was chastened by the public firestorm after Facebook revealed it had manipulated the news feeds of its own users to affect their emotions, think again: OKCupid.com, the dating site, is now bragging that it deliberately arranged matches between people whom its algorithms determined were not compatible – just to get data on how well the site was working.
Short and muscular, his ruddy face framed by mutton-chop sideburns, Robertson was the head golf professional at the Old Course in the early part of the 19th century, which meant that he arranged matches, gave instruction, made clubs and balls, supervised the links and generally walked around town looking important.
Over the last decade, the community also relaxed its restrictions on intermarriage, allowing in about 25 women, mostly Jewish Israelis and arranged matches with brides from Ukraine.
Similar(55)
They sound more like an arranged match than a couple transfixed by each other.
She married at 18, and although it was an arranged match, she and her husband fell in love, she said.
Khitam, a Gaza-born Palestinian woman, was married off in an arranged match to an Israeli Palestinian, followed him to Israel and bore him six children.
(Bhutto's first wife, a cousin whom he married, in an arranged match, when he was twelve, lives on the family compound).
She maintains — not altogether convincingly — that it was not an "absolutely" arranged match, since she had been given the power of veto after Asif was chosen by her aunt.
Instead of grandstanding through hastily arranged match-fixing summits, the Government should follow the Australian lead and consider banning the ceaseless pre-watershed advertising of in-play betting because of the perceived influence on children.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com