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The phrase "a bad index" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe an index that is poorly organized, inaccurate, or not helpful in locating information.
Example: "The book was informative, but the bad index made it difficult to find specific topics."
Alternatives: "an inadequate index" or "a poor index".
Exact(3)
But when it does move, the House of Commons is, after all, not a bad index.
In addition, lean mass (independent of body fatness) is positively associated with clustered CVD risk in girls, which is a novel finding that helps to understand why an index such as BMI is a good index of CVD risk but a bad index of adiposity.
On the rational front, I've often defended my change in view from my 1960 FAJ article with this idea: In 1960, we compared a bad index (DJIA) with a good industry—see (a) to (d) above.
Similar(57)
However, since other authors have suggested that a high PGE2 production is a bad prognostic index, it is possible that conversion of PGE2 to PGF2 alpha by 9-keto-reductase explains this relationship.
The F ("Fake bad") index assesses whether the parent rated the child in an overly negative fashion.
Bad indexes are legion.
Here is the market's version of Gresham's law: Bad indexes drive out good ones.
Automatically generating database indexes on application startup is probably a bad idea.
I cannot show you how reducing annuities through a change to the consumer price index will lower the economic activity in the country and is a bad idea.
That's a bad idea.
Each element of the list is associated with a bad reversal, the indices of which we mark in an n by n matrix; an entry r at row i and column j indicates that the bad reversal r acts on elements from position i to position j in the permutation.
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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