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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a full study" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a comprehensive or complete examination of a subject or topic.
Example: "The researchers conducted a full study on the effects of climate change on local ecosystems."
Alternatives: "a comprehensive study" or "an extensive study".
Exact(60)
A full study, Mr. Goetz acknowledged, would require similar surveys of congregational leaders and denominational officials.
There needs to be a full study of what I'm going to disclose.
The necessary improvements would cost perhaps $2.5 billion, Mr. Naomi said, adding that the figure was only an estimate because Congress had not approved a full study.
Ms. Tanzi believed that ultimately the study would help her cause: "They really, truly are doing a full study of this and making an informed decision".
To make a full study of the adsorption energies we considered the antiferromagnetic (AFM) and ferromagnetic (FM) states of the Mn2 on the surface.
In November, five Senators from Southeastern states called for the agency to defer new timber sales and road building in the southern Appalachians until a full study of the ramifications of the new roads was made.
"It will be interesting in the future to do a full study of human populations using this strain-level method to see whether we can use bacteria to reconstruct the history of human migrations," he said.
A full study of the effects of temperature on joints must cover shrinkage of the adhesive, differential coefficients of thermal expansion and variation of adhesive mechanical properties with temperature such as the stress strain curve and the toughness.
Such a full study of SiC is able to indicate under what conditions in a fusion plant this material would be suitable from an activation standpoint, and indicates the acceptable impurity levels.
Only RHIC, which already operates at a higher energy than the CERN accelerator and will be even more powerful when it starts again in the spring, could resolve the question in detail and allow a full study of the plasma, he said.
Further evidence of the lack of a full study of the seized material can be found in a February 2010 memo to ministers by Yates's staff officer, Detective Superintendent Dean Haydon, in which he stated that "minimal work was done on the vast personal data where no criminal offences were apparent".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com