Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "a datum of" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in academic or technical contexts to refer to a single piece of information or data point.
Example: "In our research, we collected a datum of interest that significantly impacted our findings."
Alternatives: "a piece of data" or "a data point".
Exact(4)
Its imminence is, today, not an article of faith but a datum of observation and experience.
This begins with a datum of faith: humans believe God to be the being than which none greater can be conceived.
Malebranche takes this to be a datum of our experience, but the underlying principle is of Platonic origin.
Rather, he simply accepts it as a datum of history: philosophy can no more deny this progress than it can deny progress in the history of physics and mathematics.
Similar(56)
As one application, a 2-Segal Q-object gives rise to a datum on the moduli space of G-structured surfaces.
Moreover, scaling operations are inserted in the application to adapt the fixed-point format of a datum to its dynamic range or to align the binary-point of the addition inputs.
Given a datum, degrees of truth of fuzzy predicates associated with each cluster are computed using continuous membership functions defined over data features.
A background assumption is that there is only one stick-like thing that one sees in the example, and that thing is either an actual, physical stick, or a sense datum of a stick.
He refers to a datum courtesy of The Huffington Post, which reported in the spring of 2012 that, so far, "the top 150 consulting companies had... grossed more than $465 million" during the campaign.
A Coxeter groupoid over a basic datum of size one is just a Coxeter group.
As is particularly evident, for instance, in Natorp (1911, 26 67), for the Marburg Neo-Kantians whatever we might be tempted to consider a pure given or a raw datum of experience can be analyzed into an underlying thought-process, whereby the given is actually constructed according to a conceptually articulable (i.e., logical) pattern.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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