Dictionary
saga
noun
An Old Norse (Icelandic) prose narrative, especially one dealing with family or social histories and legends.
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The word "saga" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use the word saga to describe a long story or series of related stories, usually about a heroic figure. For example: The Lord of the Rings is an epic fantasy saga set in Middle Earth.
Exact(60)
Others basked in a wave of optimism, this being the best scheme to come out of a tawdry saga of ill-conceived visions that has dragged on for the past quarter of a century.
But that is also a reason why, in another sense, the Silvio Berlusconi saga has a way to run.
In getting to grips with the Juncker saga, Vestager has already obtained the Luxleaks material.
It is difficult to say which is more unbearable: another instalment in the Kevin Pietersen saga, or watching England play cricket.
Nostalgia was bittersweet in Roddy Doyle's The Guts (Jonathan Cape), which caught up with the music-mad hero of The Commitments, weighed down by illness and middle age, while Elizabeth Jane Howard, now 90, added a final volume, All Change (Mantle), to her upper-class family saga the Cazalet chronicles – still comfort reading supreme.
He went on to explain that it was something of a departure for him; an ambitious but outwardly conventional Scottish family saga.
Records of the entire saga, including the court order over visitation rights and the prosecution of McAleer, have been expunged from Maryland's publicly accessible court and police files.
It looks like the urban planner might have fallen asleep at his drawing board, but these are the proposals for a new skateboarding space under Hungerford bridge on the South Bank in London – the latest chapter in the ongoing saga of the area's redevelopment.
From humble beginnings as a low-budget revenge thriller shot guerrilla-style on country lanes outside Melbourne, George Miller's post-apocalyptic saga is preparing for its biggest and most artfully boisterous outing yet in Mad Max: Fury Road.
As part of a series in the New York Times Magazine, author Karl Ove Knausgaard continues his "saga", telling the story of a road trip from Cleveland to Detroit, complete with a visit to his cousin.
When more dangerous addictions took hold, the saga of Troubled Gazza began to overwhelm the footballer himself.
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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