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The word "lumped" is correct and can be used in written English
You can use it to describe a group or collection of people or things that are thought of as one. For example, "The public school system often gets lumped in with private schools when talking about education reform."
Exact(60)
In a sentence he had lumped a section of his own party in with Ed Balls, thereby discrediting them in the eyes of other Conservatives.
Even so, campaign group Generation Rent has dismissed the proposals as not "real rent controls" while the Independent's John Rentoul has lumped them in with other policies he deems economically dim.
At other times, Mourinho has lumped in the media and in particular Sky's television pundits as further evidence that there is a concerted conspiracy against his club.
Towards the end he was often lumped together with his near-contemporary, Tony Benn.
Labor market reforms are often lumped in with austerity, since both are highly unpopular, but they analytically quite different - Italy, for example, has chosen more austerity than labor reform, and suffering the consequences.
ICM used postcodes to place its 1,002 respondents into individual seats, which were then lumped into four categories – including "Labour heartland" (where the 2010 lead over the SNP exceeded 25 points) and "more marginal Labour".
Everyone living in Ghana – rich and poor – is lumped together in a permanent jumble of terrible traffic, unreliable water and frequent power outages.
The Chinese government ordered a stop to new construction in 2004, but the number of clubs has tripled since then in other guises, lumped in with acceptable projects such as protected nature reserves.
It's true that Hayek is commonly lumped in with libertarians.
In pursuit of their own interests, Conservative speakers portrayed the nearby River Wye as an almost impassable barrier crossed by only a few, narrow bridges, and fretted that one proposed seat would involve a lot of driving for its MP.From Much Wenlock, a pretty town full of pricey houses, came a plea not to be lumped in with grittier Telford.
The aspiring middle-income country is also often lumped together with its economically less-developed neighbours Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan – and is referred to as one of the "stans" ("stan" means "place of" in Persian and "settlement" in Russian).This has long needled the nation´s leadership, which puts itself in a different league from its neighbours.
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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