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Discover Ludwig"committed to paper" is an appropriate and correct phrase in written English.
It is often used to describe the act of writing something down in order to make a record of it. For example, "The minutes of the meeting were committed to paper for posterity."
Exact(42)
Agreements that can be committed to paper today will shape the debates of tomorrow.
"And so time went by – three months, six months – without a word being committed to paper.
Mrs. Hunter got the idea committed to paper, a schematic of how the device should be engineered.
And those are the things that the couple, notwithstanding their wonderfully revealing correspondence, never committed to paper.
"Like most of her undertakings," we learn, "it was well worked out, timed, costed and committed to paper.
First world war poetry, if not written on the battlefield itself, was generally committed to paper shortly afterwards.
Similar(12)
There's his garret to finish, and more things to commit to paper.
That may not have been seditious talk, but it was a lot for a sleepy scribbler to commit to paper at that hour.
But there was always the bubbling effervescence of a writer incapable of committing to paper a banal thought or a dull line.
As a book historian, I've spent many hours examining the advice that past centuries found worthy of committing to paper, from dancing handbooks to etiquette manuals to recipe collections.
When you ponder too long – and trust me, collecting any coherent thoughts to commit to paper has definitely made me ponder too long – it dawns on you that "zeitgeist" is brief of definition but open-ended in application.
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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