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The phrase "a device engineered to" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing the purpose or function of a device that has been specifically designed or created for a particular task or application.
Example: "The new smartphone is a device engineered to withstand extreme temperatures and conditions."
Alternatives: "a device designed to" or "a device created to".
Exact(1)
Last year's international winner was Dan Watson, inventor of a device engineered to help the sustainability of fishing.
Similar(59)
Meet Newstweek, a hidden device engineered to hack news items being read at public WiFi hotspots (cafes, libraries, airports, etc).
The Absorb everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold (AbsorbBVS) is a completely resorbable device engineered to overcome the limitations of permanent metallic stents, providing temporary scaffolding and antiproliferative drug delivery for the treatment of obstructive coronary artery disease.
The ingenious hand-cranked audio devices, engineered to be usable by people without electricity, are presented with the amazement that only a filmmaker pious about audiovisual technology could convey.
Artificial (electronic) noses are devices engineered to identify volatile odorous compounds.
But it isn't often that a device engineered by humans is later found to also exist in nature.
A multidisciplinary group of gastrointestinal physicians and surgeons worked with medical device engineers to develop new devices and instruments.
Knowledge of both carrier and phonon dynamical properties is indispensable for device engineers to design better and faster devices.
An original device has been engineered to measure the pressure kinetics.
Tissue engineered scaffolds and devices are often engineered to be delivered by minimally invasive mechanisms such as polymerization or spreading upon injection into the target site.
Regulation on needle safety requires employers to provide workers with SENs: devices that have been engineered to eliminate or minimize the risk of skin puncture injury and that have been licensed as a medical device by Health Canada [ 4].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com