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The phrase "a considerable cause for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a significant reason or factor contributing to a particular outcome or situation.
Example: "The lack of funding was a considerable cause for the project's failure."
Alternatives: "a significant reason for" or "a major factor in".
Exact(3)
The incidence of these infections in primary care is relatively high, especially in children, hereby forming a considerable cause for antibiotic prescriptions [ 14, 16, 17].
Patients who are discharged from the hospital and readmitted within a short time are a considerable cause for concern among healthcare providers.
Moreover, depression has another feature that is a considerable cause for concern: the development of a chronic clinical course, which also resists treatment.
Similar(56)
The government's plans, still vague, to set up a new entity for rehabilitating troubled borrowers give considerable cause for alarm.
But there is considerable cause for comfort.
The transferable vote election system is the key, and gives the SDLP considerable cause for optimism that it can hold nationalism's pole position.
When the female corps de ballet also looks good, as it currently does in "Serenade," Balanchine's "Concerto Barocco" (1941) and other ballets, there's considerable cause for gratitude.
Jonny Wilkinson's final appearance on a rugby ground in Britain ended with the fly-half becoming the final captain to hoist the Heineken Cup after another polished performance that should give his successor in the England team, Owen Farrell, considerable cause for reflection.
"But the ramifications are considerable, causing havoc for fixture calendars in an estimated 50 countries.
These included several trials that primarily aimed to improve symptoms or functional status, trials that tested interventions with a considerable potential for causing harm (mainly bleeding) that were not meaningfully measured, and trials with composite outcomes that were dominated by outcomes of questionable importance to patients.
Literary critics – themselves a dying breed, a cause for considerable schadenfreude on the part of novelists – make all sorts of mistakes, but some of the most egregious ones result from an inability to think outside of the papery prison within which they conduct their lives' work.
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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