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The word "rubrics" is correct and usable in written English.
It is commonly used as a noun to refer to a set of rules, guidelines, or instructions for a task or assessment. It can also refer to a scoring guide or criteria for evaluating something. Here is an example sentence: "The teacher provided clear rubrics for the essay assignment, outlining the expectations for structure, content, and grammar."
Dictionary
rubrics
noun
Plural of rubric
synonyms
Exact(60)
You could fit a number of very different agendas under those rubrics.
Certainly, under both rubrics there is scope for years of litigation and while that is going on, American firms will be at least somewhat restricted in their access to Chinese markets.In any case, the real objections to the agreement are political, rather than economic.
Under the twin rubrics of "competitiveness and employment" and "transnational co-operation", the commission will spend more than €50 billion over seven years in prosperous countries.Ask commission officials to defend such spending policies, and they offer a variety of reasons.
Some individuals may well find that special times and places, special rubrics and ceremonies, and a properly enclosed and framed setting for the appearance of the holy are necessary for their worship.
Although extremely varied in form and subject matter, their endeavours have been grouped together under the terms experimental film or avant-garde film, as well as under the broader rubrics of alternative cinema or art cinema.
The launch, scheduled for April 1st, was only a couple of months away, and Dykstra began going over a marketing brochure that listed various proposed features and columns, sounding out their rubrics: "Off the Field and On the Money," for instance, and "Making a Difference," which he wasn't happy with.
Not only is the game eleven-a-side, the ball round, the pitch a grassy oblong, the goalposts rectangular and backed by a net, the object to score goals (literally, to lodge the ball in the opposing net) — these are the mere rubrics of the game, tantamount to saving that the game of baseball is nine-a-side and requires a bat and a ball.
This winning formula extends to the sly twist on The New Yorker's rubrics — the article "categories" that the magazine uses, such as "Annals of Communication" or "The Sporting Scene".
Today there are thirty-six varieties of Ragú spaghetti sauce, under six rubrics — Old World Style, Chunky Garden Style, Robusto, Light, Cheese Creations, and Rich & Meaty — which means that there is very nearly an optimal spaghetti sauce for every man, woman, and child in America.
The band has released a hundred archival concert recordings, under various rubrics, but they also often (though not always) tolerated the taping of their concerts by people in the audience, as long as the tapes were traded, not sold.
In the magazine, of course, there were no rubrics, so, you know, the reader could make up his or her mind.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com