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The phrase "strict principles" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used when referring to rigid or uncompromising standards or rules that guide behavior or decision-making. Example: "The organization operates under strict principles to ensure ethical conduct and accountability."
Exact(10)
At a crucial age in his intellectual development, he was brought up in the strict principles of Protestantism.
Kant's conception of morality as a matter of rigid adherence to strict principles emerges as partly an intended remedy for his own hypochondria.
In an interview before he left, he declined to say where he was going, but said he planned to apply the same strict principles as in his mountain expeditions: no support staff, minimal gear and no emergency communications equipment.
One of the reasons for this is that news reporting in the UK is now so closely intertwined with spin and PR that it has become visibly weakened as a source of information; and so it seems less potent when compared to the first-person accounts that are penned by vigilant reporters who still adhere to strict principles in news-gathering, or for that matter, to blogs by members of the public.
At General Motors, which abides by strict principles of just-in-time manufacturing, factories carry just a day or two of inventory.
While his textbooks were succinctly organized according to very strict principles, the lectures (Scholae) were less laconic and offered more detailed discussion.
Similar(49)
First, because hers was a short marriage, lasting just four years, so the strict principle of equality did not apply.
Another trend that developed in the Sāsānian period, although it had already made itself felt under the Arsacids, was a strict principle of dynastic legitimacy.
The striped paintings, made according to a strict principle, are as boring as the method itself and seeing so many at the Fruitmarket Gallery only makes one conscious of the difference between permutation and actual variety.
Canada's Mr Harper, for example, did not make his choice as a matter of strict principle: note his willingness to pay enthusiastic visits to China, a far more authoritarian country.
He offered to set up a special tribunal in Uganda which would try the rebel leaders, with an implicit understanding that they might get off lightly or maybe escape prison altogether.Mind those hurdlesUnder the ICC's strict principle of "complementarity", the court will take on an atrocities case only if the country itself is "unable or unwilling" to do so.
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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