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The phrase "a computer to give" is not correct and lacks clarity in written English.
It may be used in contexts where you are referring to a computer that is intended for the purpose of giving something, but it needs additional context to be meaningful.
Example: "I need a computer to give presentations effectively."
Alternatives: "a computer for providing" or "a computer to offer".
Exact(3)
Eeles said a simple test at a GP surgery could be read by a computer to give each patient a personalised risk profile for the disease.
When a man called from Princeton and said he had a computer to give away, Sister Mary Vincent agreed to drive to Lindenwold -- where he would be spending the weekend -- so she could get it from him.
Hughes's team scanned the intact tymbal as if it were in a series of cross-sections just a few microns thick and then assembled those cross-sections via a computer to give an extremely detailed picture of the tymbal.
Similar(57)
This three dimensional procedure accounts for torsional coupling and the bending rotations at beam column junctions and it can be used with a personal computer to give fast and reasonably accurate results, which compare well with those from comprehensive finite element analysis.
Each image is a composite of many photographs, taken by a professional photographer in New York and minutely adjusted by computer to give an impression of volume on a flat surface.
He typed in a few commands, instructing the computer to give him the formulation that would score the highest with those people in Segment 1.
This seems a more important failure than coming last, as Canada did, in prompting doctors by computer to give patients a test result.
Talk to the mechanics at the garage you take your car to, get the person who is fixing your computer to give you an overview of what they are doing to fix it.
I imagined Wolfson stomping murderously on the doll, then sitting calmly before a computer screen to give it a human face.
In the early sixties, Bell Labs programmed a computer to sing "Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer do".
He turned to a computer program to give him movement ideas, and in "Biped," from 1999, he used "motion capture".
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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