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The phrase "as a regular word" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the usage or classification of a word in a specific context, particularly in contrast to jargon or specialized terms.
Example: "In this context, 'computer' is used as a regular word, referring to any device that processes data."
Alternatives: "as a common term" or "as an ordinary word".
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First, when the user has ownership over the text block, the block is editable and the window can be used as a regular word processor.
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The following result gives an alternative approach to the definition of LS words as the radicals of associative supports u of the normal words [ u ]. ([37]) Suppose that [ u ] is a regular word of the anti-commutative algebra A C ( X ).
Vandiver is the kind of man that Dailey likes to characterize as a "regular American," words intended as the highest praise.
The consistent nonwords were created by changing the onset of an existing regular word.
That word is "regular," and while it seems like an awfully, uh, regular word to unleash such a firestorm, it is apparently loaded enough to end a four-year-relationship. "Regular" is how Greg was overheard describing Steph's face.
Lyndon [156], 1954, defined standard words, which are the same as Shirshov's regular words [203], 1958.
Task and lexicality interacted significantly for the comparison of irregular words versus pseudowords as well (F > 70), showing a very similar pattern as that observed for regular words, that is, a positive lexicality effect for read and a negative lexicality effect for regularize.
All the alien stuff in the last nine seasons and two movies was, of course, a smokescreen hiding the Real Truth: that America will soon be in the grip of a class of Elites, rather than by a class of people who use the word "elite" as a regular singular noun, which at present seems more likely.
Generally English slang revolves around a regular English word.
The longest regular word to appear in the dictionary -- "pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" -- is only a puny 45 letters in length, Unexplained-Mysteries.com reported, adding that some lexicographers aren't sure whether the name of a chemical actually qualifies as a word.
(+$75) The word after the gerund in your two-word title is a proper noun masquerading as a regular noun, i.e. "Losing Ground," a novel about a man named Peter Ground.
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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