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The phrase "articulate something" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to express or convey an idea, thought, or feeling clearly and effectively.
Example: "It's important to articulate something clearly during the presentation to ensure everyone understands the main points."
Alternatives: "express something" or "convey something".
Exact(29)
Springsteen's mission has always been to be a useful conduit to reflect or articulate something back at us.
I was fascinated that someone could capture and articulate something so fleeting and magical as the precious moments when all things in the perceived universe merge to enhance one's own engagement.
While Krauss's writing is about how art occurs in the world, she's also describing why she's moved to think about, and to try to articulate something of, the passion she finds in looking.
JB I quickly realised, but did not articulate, something the anthropologist Gregory Bateson told me 10 years later: that of all our human inventions, economic man was by far the dullest.
He was a writer who – without really intending to – managed to articulate something about England, when the English lack a clear idea of what their nation means, unlike the Scots and Welsh.
When designers talk about their collections they get ethereal, their thoughts wander and they struggle to say exactly what they mean, because it's a struggle to articulate something as intangible as inspiration.
Similar(31)
The Pope himself articulated something similar.
"Any time somebody other than you is articulating something about you, it feels inaccurate," he says.
That wasn't specifically because of my book, but I had articulated something".
I would say, nonetheless, that even if Lincoln is articulating something that's already there, it's done so masterfully.
Werner Loell Portsmouth, R.I., Feb. 18, 2010 To the Editor: Developing a language that articulates something so profound as global climate change appears to require constant reinvention.
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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