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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a clear equivalent" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing something that has a direct and understandable counterpart or match in another context or language.
Example: "In this context, the term 'freedom' has a clear equivalent in many languages, such as 'liberté' in French."
Alternatives: "an obvious counterpart" or "a direct match".
Exact(2)
This relation is most clear for the regular bursting, oscillatory and saturated states of the detailed model because these have a clear equivalent attractor in the population model studied in this article.
The abnormal diurnal motor rhythm of NK1R-/ mice has a clear equivalent in ADHD.
Similar(58)
Proposition 3.8 may be rewritten in a more clear equivalent form as follows: Proposition 3.9.
A-levels have no clear equivalent in the United States.
Telecom companies were able to offer much desired services broadband Internet, mobile phone service, and content but utilities don't have any clear equivalents and aren't normally in the business of offering innovative services, he says.
Activating an enzyme through the use of a small molecule has no clear equivalent in terms of gene manipulation as exogenous overexpression of a target of interest will not ensure a commensurate increase in enzyme activity.[ 21] In comparison to inhibition, the level of binding-site occupancy required for activators to have a pharmacologically relevant effect is extremely low.
But even in more general terms it's hard for me to come up with a clear, contemporary equivalent of the flapper, because back in the 20s there wasn't any simple definition of who or what she was.
However, molecular function does not have a clear OPM equivalent.
Whomever that turns out to be, the citizenship bureau will have no clear equivalent to Mr. Hutchinson to wage its bureaucratic and policy battles.
Sawblade cutting technology for stone parts have several specific parameters with no clear equivalent technologies as defined in milling, turning, etc.
Surprisingly, secondary insertion into erythrocyte ghosts of fluorescent analogs for glycerophospholipids (expected to partition as a continuous diffuse phase) strongly labelled one or two micrometric "domains", with distributions depending on the headgroup, but no clear equivalent was originally reported in living erythrocytes [25].
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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