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Discover Ludwig"too scattered" is correct and usable in written English.
You may use it to describe something that is disorganized or disordered. For example, "The notes I took during the lecture were too scattered for me to make sense of them."
Exact(51)
For one thing, Zimbabweans are too scattered to coordinate a revolt.
Until recently, though, the records were too numerous, and too scattered, to be useful to historians.
There's a little sugar, too, scattered like the mineral gleams in a sidewalk.
Latinos are simply too scattered geographically and too variable in their voting patterns for that.
As he repeatedly explained, Tanzanians were too scattered for services to be brought to them.
The community is too scattered, too idealistic, and too heterogenous to follow pronouncements from on high.
Similar(9)
They don't, of course; there is too much, too widely scattered, the Internet notwithstanding.
Perhaps it was too scatter-shot, with Tesfaye drawing from Stevie Nicks, Genesis and Phil Collins.
Plus ça change: "Skyfall," too, scatters Istanbul's residents and their goods like bowling pins.
Though his opposition to immigration and, latterly, Britain becoming "a dumping ground" for economic as distinct from political refugees, alienated many leftwingers, he was too patently against human or animal suffering and too scatter-gun in his beliefs to make such critics more than mildly uncomfortable.
The focus is far too scatter-shot to engender a compelling snapshot of the modern newspaper.
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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