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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a assertion of the" is not correct.
Did you mean "an assertion of the"? You can use it when discussing a claim or statement that is being made, particularly in formal or academic contexts.
Example: "The paper presents an assertion of the author's theory regarding climate change."
Alternatives: "a claim of the" or "a statement of the".
Exact(1)
Most of the policies he lists at the end of his article are supported by the Greens, and his call for a assertion of the public good accords with the Green party slogan "for the common good".
Similar(59)
His reiterated attempt to express the dignity of an adult man is a social project, an assertion of the deepest possible civil right.
Foreign analysts said the charge was intended as a warning and an assertion of the limits of political discourse before the nation's Communist Party congress next year.
Baratte takes a determinedly scientific view of the world – his nightly catechism is not a prayer but an assertion of the "power of reason" – but in the end his science does not comfort him.
For example, the Polish mereologist, in certain contexts, might be able to speak truly in asserting 'any objects compose a further object', whereas an assertion of the negation of this sentence might true in different contexts.
Passing the legislation would do little good if the S.E.C. and the Justice Department would be stymied in trying to conduct an investigation by an assertion of the Speech or Debate Clause to stop the case dead in its tracks.
That can actually be viewed as a good thing, and a compliment to writers too, an assertion of the value of their craft.
'Every novel is a logical argument - an assertion of the author's sense of what life is, embodied in characters, plots and images......
For example, it could potentially remove federal legal jeopardy in a manner that may defeat an assertion of the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
That is, it is an assertion of the lack of a population exposure threshold for the increase in risk of an induced effect.
In view of this, it is important that the additivity-to-background argument the lynchpin of the proposal to apply low-dose linearity to noncancer risk assessment is an assertion of the existence of a linear component to the population dose-response curve at the very lowest doses.
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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