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The phrase "a date by which" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to specify a deadline or a specific point in time by which something must be completed or achieved.
Example: "Please submit your report by a date by which we can review it before the meeting."
Alternatives: "a deadline for" or "a due date for".
Exact(54)
Neither manufacturer can provide a date by which its phones will be available.
Let's set a date by which no new car is manufactured unless it's electric.
There's now a date by which all these buildings need to install these drinking water taps.
Now it cannot give a date by which the report will be completed.
This could include setting a date by which the use of fossil fuels will stop.
But study they must, said Trost, who would not give a date by which all the cramming will end.
Similar(6)
"I can't say there's a definitive date by which a schedule would have to be in place in order to realign in 1993, but it should have been done months ago," she said.
"It has become clear that a definite date by which time a final decision by the U.S. DOJ will be rendered in this matter cannot be predicted," Byrne wrote on Monday.
The date would initially serve as a bargaining deadline, giving the negotiators a real date by which they would need to work out an agreement.
Institute policy does not require an employee to establish a fixed date by which the transfer will be accomplished.
Then I asked him a question for which I didn't expect a straight answer: could he give me a precise date by which he expects conventional oil supplies to stop growing?
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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