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"enlarge on" is a correct phrase in written English, typically used to mean to provide further details or elaboration on a topic.
It is usually used in a formal or academic context. Example: The professor asked the students to enlarge on the historical background of the author's writing style.
Exact(38)
Brad DeLong saves me the trouble of responding to Alan Reynolds.But I'd like to enlarge on one substantive point.
To enlarge on the basis of this one piece is hazardous, but Mr. Suter would seem to be one of those composers for whom the first-generation modernists -- Stravinsky, Bartok, Schoenberg -- provided an enlarged, if also chastened, expressive vocabulary: enlarged by atonal harmony, freer rhythm and colorful orchestration, chastened by an abiding suspicion of Romanticism.
Just to enlarge on Joe's chart, I have one showing both Italy (his case) and Spain.
I did not enlarge on the sentiment.
He refused to enlarge on what he meant by this.
The girl was prone to enlarge on the truth, and her knowledge was exaggeratedly spotty, certainly.
Similar(22)
Interspersed between the asci are numerous sterile, filamentous dark-brown cells called paraphyses that are slightly enlarged on one end, and 380 420 µm long by 4 5 µm wide.
But one theme worth enlarging on is Hughes's fascination with the supernatural and the paranormal.
Black arrows on left panels point to the metastasis, one of them is enlarged on the right panel.
But five days later Liggeri, without the lawyers present, enlarged on the covert operation against Aondoakaa.
As he makes his first line, a brushstroke appears enlarged on a screen.
More suggestions(5)
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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