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The phrase "at the established" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you refer to a specific point in time or a location that has been previously determined or set.
Example: "We will meet at the established time to discuss the project details."
Alternatives: "at the agreed" or "at the designated".
Exact(60)
Many of the best players, coaches and administrators remain at the established clubs.
Instead, let's look at the established patterns of sexualized threats online – there have certainly been enough of them.
The convertibility of the dollar alone at the established price of $35 per ounce became the foundation of the system.
For him, there has been nothing like the extended Nicklaus-Palmer duels or the Watson charge at the established Nicklaus.
Looking across the channels shows that despite new rivals such as Netflix and Amazon Prime chipping away at the established players, television can still command mass audiences.
The first two obstacles were kept at the established optimum spacing and only the spacing between the second and third obstacles was varied.
The flood of dollars into other countries caused difficulty for the European central banks, which were forced to increase their dollar holdings in order to maintain their currencies at the established exchange rates.
Executives at the established consulting firms might have been pleased by announcements of losses, layoffs and restructurings at new-wave consultants, like Scient and MarchFirst, which grew explosively in recent years to help dot-coms and other businesses rush something -- anything -- onto the Web.
But perhaps, with a more clear-eyed vision of what is to come — and with men and women holding more aligned views about the value of work and parenting — people will take more focused, concerted action to chip away at the established order and more successfully pursue new options.
Stephen I. Schwartz Wilmette, Ill., Oct. 16, 2010 To the Editor: Re "The Rage Won't End on Election Day," by Frank Rich (column, Oct. 17), and "Tales of the Tea Party," by Ross Douthat (column, Oct. 18): The Tea Party is the subject of endless analysis and debate exploring the nuances of its anger at the established political leaders.
These are voters who have been shaped by the social and economic changes over the past five decades, and who hold a fundamentally different set of values; they see a world and a way of life slipping away, feel powerless to stop it happening, and are angry at the established political class for not seeming to understand their concerns, or care about what is being lost.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com