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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com
a biased larger
Grammar usage guide and real-world examplesUSAGE SUMMARY
The phrase "a biased larger" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe a larger entity or group that is biased, but the phrasing is awkward and unclear. Example: "The study revealed that a biased larger sample size could skew the results significantly."
⚠ May contain grammatical issues
Science
News & Media
Academia
Alternative expressions(1)
Table of contents
Usage summary
Human-verified examples
Expert writing tips
Linguistic context
Ludwig's wrap-up
Alternative expressions
FAQs
Human-verified examples from authoritative sources
Exact Expressions
1 human-written examples
The isotropic component was removed because in conventional QSI-FOD measures there is no way to separate the isotropic fiber orientation from the isotropic ADC, and thus if not removed, the QSI-FODs would have a (biased) larger isotropic component compared with the HIST-FODs.
Science
Human-verified similar examples from authoritative sources
Similar Expressions
59 human-written examples
We then defined the genes with a parental bias larger than 8515%% as candidate centers of their respective clusters.
Science
Again the variance is largest in the independent cases with a bias toward larger values.
Science
Summarizing, the degap look-up calibration that was developed in 2007 (HRC-I GAPLOOKUP version N0003) suffers from a bias to larger than necessary correction near the gap boundaries.
Academia
> -wrap-foot> For VOL measurements, there was a bias towards larger measurements with a thicker slice interval (Table 2).
Science
For 1D and 2D measurements, there was a bias towards larger measurements with a smaller slice interval (Table 2).
Science
The results showed a bias to larger effect sizes of the risk alleles in the Southern Europeans relative to the Central Europeans.
The vast majority of 200 ms lesions, in contrast, were applied at 300 μm irradiation diameter (192/234), which produces a bias toward larger GLD values.
We note a bias toward larger absolute parameter estimates that we believe comes from the algorithm greedily reinforcing what it has already learned.
Science
Equally, methods generating data with a large bias (large difference between the true value and the average value of the results), or imprecision (large variance), or both, would be considered inaccurate.
A 2012 Productivity Commission inquiry found Efic had a bias towards large corporations and Efic's services to them were unjustified.
News & Media
Expert writing Tips
Best practice
When aiming for clarity, ensure the adjective order is logical and grammatically correct, such as using "a larger biased sample" instead of "a biased larger sample".
Common error
Avoid placing "biased" before "larger" as it disrupts standard English adjective ordering. Instead, use "a larger biased..." to maintain clarity.
Source & Trust
82%
Authority and reliability
2.8/5
Expert rating
Real-world application tested
Linguistic Context
The phrase "a biased larger" functions as a descriptive modifier, attempting to attribute two qualities—bias and size—to an unspecified noun. However, its grammatical awkwardness makes it ineffective. As Ludwig AI points out, the phrase isn't grammatically correct.
Frequent in
Science
33%
News & Media
33%
Academia
33%
Less common in
Formal & Business
0%
Encyclopedias
0%
Wiki
0%
Ludwig's WRAP-UP
In summary, the phrase "a biased larger" is grammatically questionable and rarely used, as confirmed by Ludwig AI. While attempting to describe something as both biased and large, it's more effective to rephrase for clarity. Options include "a larger biased sample" or specifying an entity like "a larger biased group". Proper adjective order and grammatical correctness are key when conveying these attributes.
More alternative expressions(6)
Phrases that express similar concepts, ordered by semantic similarity:
a substantially biased
Replaces "larger" with "substantially" to emphasize the degree of bias, maintaining a similar meaning.
a significantly biased bigger
Adds "bigger" to explicitly state the size aspect and emphasize that the bias is important.
a more biased substantial
Emphasizes the intensity of the bias, while "substantial" refers to large
a considerably biased greater
Uses "considerably" to intensify the bias and "greater" to specify the quantity.
a biased, larger entity
Rephrases to specify "entity" to increase clarity while keeping both attributes.
a biased and larger item
Inserts “item” to provide a noun and clarifies the meaning and usage.
a larger biased sample
Reorders the adjectives and adds "sample" to fix the grammar and clarify the meaning.
a larger, biased group
Uses "group" instead of generalizing and correct the grammar adding a comma.
an extensively biased larger
“Extensively” increases the impact of the bias, maintaining a similar meaning to "substantially biased".
a biased thing, of larger size
This rephrasing emphasizes the size aspect using the more descriptive term of “thing”.
FAQs
How can I correctly use the terms 'biased' and 'larger' together in a sentence?
It's better to structure it as "a larger biased [noun]", for example, "a larger biased sample", to follow standard adjective order in English.
What is a clearer alternative to the phrase "a biased larger"?
Consider using phrases like "a larger biased sample" or "a substantially biased group" for better clarity.
Is "a biased larger" grammatically correct?
No, "a biased larger" is not grammatically correct. A more appropriate phrasing would be "a larger biased..." followed by a noun.
What does "a biased larger" mean, and how can I express it more effectively?
The phrase attempts to describe something that is both biased and of significant size. Rephrasing as "a larger biased entity" clarifies the meaning.
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Table of contents
Usage summary
Human-verified examples
Expert writing tips
Linguistic context
Ludwig's wrap-up
Alternative expressions
FAQs
Source & Trust
82%
Authority and reliability
2.8/5
Expert rating
Real-world application tested