Ai Feedback
The word 'plume' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to a feather, especially the showy feathers of a bird's tail or wing. For example: "The peacock displayed its colorful plumes to attract a mate."
Exact(60)
A plume of vapour was generated, which gave the same throat-hit sensation you get when you smoke a cigarette".
This superb adaptation of the 1950 short story written by Karen Blixen (under her nom de plume of Isak Dinesen), which first appeared in the Ladies Home Journall magazine, remains true to its literary source with no loss to cinematic quality.
A former RUC Special Branch officer-turned-author under the nom de plume Alan Barker told me that his undercover unit in Derry could not believe the news that the IRA had shot Flood.
Philip Tetlock: Leonore Annenberg University professor of Psychology and Management, University of Pennsylvania Dan Gardner: journalist and author of "Future Babble: Why Pundits Are Hedgehogs and Foxes Know Best" (Plume).
THE World Trade Organisation's general council will skip the plume of smoke when it chooses its new director-general in May.
The team report in Plasma Processes and Polymers that when the plume was directed into the infected interiors of teeth, it succeeded in clearing up well-established infections completely.That may just be the beginning.
Babbage summarises the series of internal disasters and MIT is producing a running and highly readable commentary.Hours earlier this morning a plume of white smoke (or possibly steam) was seen rising off one of the plant's reactors.
"This is a real signal," says Chris McKay, a longtime sceptic of the plume hypothesis who is nevertheless one of the authors of the paper in Science.So what explains Curiosity's plume?
Wakana, her family and thousands of others were ordered to drive to evacuation shelters which, although farther away, were directly in the path of the plant's plume of radioactivity.Wakana now lives in Koriyama, a city 60km west of Fukushima Dai-ichi.
On April 12, they rehearsed their response to a (then-fictional) Grimsvotn eruption that sent a (fictional) plume of ash 11 km into the sky above the volcano Airlines and air-traffic controllers across Europe quickly took note.
If a probe flying through a watery plume picked up a cargo of left-handed amino acids, that would pretty much close the case on whether there are aliens on Enceladus.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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