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The phrase "a comprehensive test" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a test that covers a wide range of material or assesses a thorough understanding of a subject.
Example: "The final exam will be a comprehensive test that includes all the topics we covered throughout the semester."
Alternatives: "an extensive assessment" or "a thorough evaluation".
Exact(59)
To that end, he endorsed a comprehensive test ban treaty if adequate verification measures could be negotiated.
Or if you have never had your soil tested, order a comprehensive test from a local Cooperative Extension Service.
India has resisted signing a comprehensive test ban treaty unless the entire world moves to nuclear disarmament.
Not what you'd call a comprehensive test, but it shows that it's location-aware, context-aware, and works without training.
Only 35 senators could block the US from ratifying a comprehensive test ban or treaties for further reductions of nuclear arsenals, necessary steps on a road to zero.
Both were judged as among the most reliable and easy to use in a comprehensive test of printers last year compiled by Make Magazine.
They could well be modelled much more along the lines of the American credit system, with only the final examination being a comprehensive test of all the subjects covered.
Obama, who has been committed to nuclear disarmament since his university days, may be tempted to take another step next year and press the Senate on a comprehensive test ban treaty.
Some leading genetic scientists from Harvard, M.I.T. and the Broad Institute recently helped start a company, Foundation Medicine, that plans to develop a comprehensive test profiling a patient's tumor, to help doctors personalize therapy.
By her account, Ms. Forsberg could not believe that the 1963 talks on a comprehensive test ban treaty had broken down over a dispute between Washington's demand for seven on-site inspections a year and the Russians' insistence on no more than three.
"It showed that the U.S. and Soviet governments could work together on nuclear verification," John H. Adams, the council's founding director, said in a telephone interview on Monday, "and as a direct result of this work, in 1994, Clinton signed a comprehensive test ban treaty with the Soviet Union".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com