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Discover Ludwig"dedicated units" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a specific group or team of individuals who have been assigned a specific task or responsibility. Example: The company has dedicated units responsible for marketing, sales, and customer service.
Exact(20)
They contained the first inductees into the dedicated units.
(France's prison watchdog noted there were 928 prisoners for 580 places at Osny in a report last June; the dedicated units are exceptional in providing single-occupancy cells).
Early this year, five projects were set up to provide separate dedicated units for a number of radicalised prisoners in detention in France.
Critics of bunching Islamic radicals together in dedicated units fear that, far from shielding the mass of detainees from contagion, they may create ghettos of hardened extremists.
Over the past year or so, France has also established several dedicated units for deradicalisation, but an apparent lack of rehabilitative or therapeutic programming means prisoners remain in their cells most of the day.
Despite a serious overcrowding problem already facing French prisons, Valls said that 10,000 new prison places had to be created in the next 10 years for isolation cells and dedicated units for radicalised prisoners.
Similar(38)
The effort proved so successful that, last year, Neville obtained permission to create the dedicated unit.
She has managed to convince the authorities not to move him to the dedicated unit.
In 2006, he set up a dedicated unit to comb through CCTV footage and make identifications.
Founded in 1736, today it serves the poor and indigent and has a dedicated unit for inmates from Rikers Island.
Bratton argued the creation of the dedicated unit would free up personnel from precincts around the city already assigned to heavily armed critical response units (CRVs).
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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